Alvarez v. Guerrero
Alvarez v. Guerrero
Alvarez v. Guerrero
Opinion
Case: 18-70001 Document: 130-1 Page: 1 Date Filed: 12/23/2025
United States Court of Appeals
for the Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
December 23, 2025
No. 18-70001
Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
Juan Carlos Alvarez,
Petitioner—Appellant,
versus
Eric Guerrero, Director, Texas Department of
Criminal Justice, Correctional Institutions Division,
Respondent—Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Texas
USDC No. 4:09-CV-3040
Before Elrod, Chief Judge, and Jones and Richman, Circuit Judges.
Edith H. Jones, Circuit Judge:
Twenty-six years ago, Juan Carlos Alvarez was sentenced to death for
the murders of Michael Aguirre and Jose Varela. Alvarez now appeals the
denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus challenging his state court
conviction. This court granted Alvarez a Certificate of Appealability on three
issues: (1) whether Alvarez was constitutionally deprived of counsel because
one of his two lawyers allegedly occasionally fell asleep during his trial; (2)
whether Alvarez’s counsel were ineffective for not finding and offering
additional mitigation evidence; and (3) whether DNA evidence processed by
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the Harris County Crime lab was tainted and whether this claim is
procedurally defaulted. For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM. 1
I. Background
In 1998, the State of Texas charged Alvarez, a member of the
Southwest Cholos gang, with capital murder for his participation in two
shootings related to tensions with a rival gang, La Primera. The first shooting
resulted in the murder of Michael and Adrian Aguirre at an apartment on
Prestwood Street in Houston, Texas on June 6, 1998 (“the Prestwood
Murders”). The second shooting involved the June 17, 1998, murder of
sixteen-year-old José Varela and Hugo Perez at an apartment complex on
Woodfair Street in Houston, Texas (“the Woodfair Murders”). After
identifying Alvarez as the murderer, the State relied on eyewitness accounts,
co-participant testimony, forensic evidence, and Alvarez’s own admissions
to the police to obtain his conviction and death sentence. What follows is a
brief recounting of the relevant events, including what the district court
described as “the overwhelming evidence of guilt” on Alvarez’s part.
The Prestwood Murders
On June 6, 1998, a procession of five cars full of Cholos gang members
rolled up to an apartment complex frequented by members of La Primera.
1
Based on the following discussion, we DENY (1) Alvarez’s “Rhines” motions to
stay and hold in abeyance this appeal pending a further attempt to bolster his “sleeping
lawyer” claim and re-present his DNA testing claims to the state courts; and (2) his
pending motion for funding of further investigative services. We also DENY his motion
to supplement the record with the August 2019 Affidavit of Frumencio Reyes. Shinn v.
Ramirez, 596 U.S. 366, 142 S. Ct. 1718 (2022), forecloses consideration of the affidavit in
federal court. Shinn held that “when a federal habeas court . . . admits or reviews new
evidence for any purpose, it may not consider that evidence on the merits of a negligent
prisoner’s defaulted claim unless the exceptions in [28 U.S.C.] § 2254(e)(2) are satisfied.”
596 U.S. at 389, 142 S. Ct. at 1738. Alvarez does not argue that he falls under a § 2254(e)(2)
exception.
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After getting out of their cars, Alvarez and his fellow Cholos fired their guns
into a birthday party being celebrated just outside of the complex. Several
people were hit and two men, Adrian and Michael Aguirre, were killed.
Several eyewitnesses testified that Alvarez was one of the shooters. Forensic
examination of the crime scene identified 7.62x39mm bullet casings in the
street that were fired from a firearm owned by Alvarez. And Alvarez
confirmed his involvement in a statement to the police.
Among the eyewitnesses was Miguel Reyes, a fellow member of the
Cholos, who affirmed that Alvarez not only participated in the Prestwood
shooting but was the one who directed the whole affair. Alvarez traveled in
his own car and assembled a group of other Cholos, then headed toward the
scene of the murders. On their way to Prestwood, Alvarez told his fellow
Cholos that they would “shoot at the guys from La Primera; at whomever.”
And that is what he did. Upon arriving at the apartment complex on
Prestwood, Alvarez stepped out and walked to the front of the vehicle, then
opened fire. Only one other gang member shot at the men. Forensic
evidence confirmed Alvarez’s culpability by linking the rounds fired at the
apartment complex to one of Alvarez’s personal firearms. Finally, during the
investigation of the crime, Alvarez provided a videotaped statement to the
police in which he confessed membership in the Cholos, admitted that his car
was used for the shootings, and admitted that he knew his fellow Cholos
would fire at a rival gang. He also admitted that his SKS was used for the
drive-by though he denied firing it himself.
The Woodfair Murders
Witness testimony and forensic evidence also tied Alvarez to the
Woodfair Murders, which took place about eleven days after his Prestwood
Murders.
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One witness stated that on the day of the Woodfair shooting she saw
Alvarez loading the rifle and shotgun used in that shooting, saw him leave his
residence carrying those weapons, and then saw him return later in the
evening with blood stains on his shirt. Additionally, the sister of Jose Varela,
one of the murder victims, identified Alvarez as the shooter. She stated that
she saw Alvarez walked up holding a shotgun, heard him yelling “Southwest
Cholos, puto,” and saw him firing the shotgun. She ran away. Upon her
return she found her sixteen-year-old brother had died from shotgun wounds
to the face and back.
During the subsequent investigation, the police recovered a 12-gauge
Mossberg shotgun belonging to Alvarez from Alvarez’s apartment. The
barrel of the Mossberg was partly covered in blood. Upon forensic
examination by the Houston Police Department Crime Lab, it was
determined that some of the blood matched Jose Varela’s. One of the crime
lab’s DNA Analysts testified to this at trial, and her testimony was later
confirmed by a court-ordered re-testing during Alvarez’s state habeas
proceedings.
Moreover, Alvarez admitted that he and his wife drove his maroon
Nissan Altima to the scene of the murder while carrying a shotgun and assault
rifle. He also admitted knowledge that gang members planned to murder
someone on that day, most likely a member of La Primera gang.
The Trial
At trial, Frumencio Reyes and John L. Denninger represented
Alvarez. Reyes, a well-known Houston lawyer, had been retained by the
family a couple months before trial and took over first-chair from Denninger.
Denninger was court-appointed counsel who had already worked on the case
for at least a year. As stated by the court below, the “defense faced a daunting
challenge . . . eyewitnesses had identified him as a shooter, gang members
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pointed to him as the one who ordered the violent acts, ballistic evidence tied
him to the crimes, and his own statements confirmed some involvement.”
Moreover, Texas’s law of parties meant that Alvarez could be convicted even
if he never personally fired a shot.
In the face of overwhelming evidence pointing to his guilt, defense
counsel focused on attacking the credibility of the State’s witnesses and
calling two defense witnesses. The jury found Alvarez guilty of capital
murder.
During the punishment phase, to show future danger to society, the
State offered evidence of Alvarez’s escalating history of violence. This
included Alvarez’s previous conviction for aggravated assault with a deadly
weapon for which he received eight years deferred adjudication, other
unadjudicated aggravated assaults, and drive-by shootings Alvarez
participated in that involved at least one additional death. The State
presented a record of Alvarez’s gang violence, which was often random and
committed with no regard for bystanders.
For its part, the defense called six witnesses. A corrections officer
testified that Alvarez was quiet and did not usually cause any problems. Four
family members provided testimony about Alvarez’s background. Family
members explained that Alvarez’s family lived in Mexico until his father was
murdered. The family moved to Monterrey, Mexico, and to Houston. They
testified that Alvarez learned English, worked hard, provided for his family,
did not use drugs, was responsible, got along well with others, and was quiet.
Also discussed was how Alvarez revisited the trauma of his father’s death
when a friend of his was killed shortly before the murders in this case. A
psychologist who testified for the defense diagnosed Alvarez’s murders as a
response to his friend’s killing. The psychologist also said that testing he
conducted revealed that Alvarez was depressed and did not handle anger
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well, but Alvarez was not mentally ill. He concluded that if incarcerated,
Alvarez was not a future danger to society. In spite of this mitigation
evidence, Alvarez received the death penalty.
II. Procedural Background
After Alvarez’s conviction and sentencing, the trial court appointed
R. P. Cornelius to represent him on direct appeal. Alvarez’s appellate
counsel raised thirty-nine points of error in the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals (TCCA). The TCCA affirmed Alvarez’s conviction and sentence
in a lengthy unpublished opinion. Alvarez v. State, No. 73,648 slip op. (Tex.
Crim. App. Oct. 30, 2002).
While the direct appeal was pending, the trial court appointed Leslie
M. Ribnik and Susan Crump, two Houston attorneys experienced in capital
cases, to represent Alvarez for purposes of state habeas review. Alvarez’s
habeas counsel filed a state application for habeas on September 10, 2001.
That application raised three grounds for relief, with a principal claim that
Alvarez, a Mexican national, had been deprived of consultation with and
assistance from the Mexican consulate under the Vienna Convention.
Subsequently, on March 25, 2005, state habeas counsel filed a pleading
captioned as a “supplemental brief.” 2
2
Interplay between the trial-level court and the TCCA signaled some confusion as
to whether Alvarez’s supplemental brief inserted new claims into the habeas proceedings.
Texas law generally limits state habeas review to the claims raised and briefed in an
inmate’s initial habeas application. Texas law treats pleadings filed outside a statutorily set
period as a new habeas action. See Tex. Code Crim. Pro. art. 11.071 § 5(f). The state
trial-level habeas court construed the pleading to be a successive state habeas application
and forwarded it to the TCCA. The TCCA eventually clarified that the supplemental brief
was only an addendum to the initial habeas application: “[T]he document does not assert
additional claims, nor does it expand upon a claim already raised. Therefore, the trial court
erred in declaring the document a subsequent application. The argument and authorities
raised in the document should be considered, to the extent they are appropriate, in
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In October 2006, Ribnik notified the court that he had to withdraw
because he had developed a serious medical condition. After Ribnik’s
withdrawal, Robert L. McGlasson took up the mantle. As Alvarez’s new
habeas counsel, McGlasson filed a lengthy Reply (following the State’s
briefing opposed to habeas) in Support of Application for Writ of Habeas
Corpus. The reply sought to “provide further evidentiary support for the
legal claims raised in Mr. Alvarez’s application for a writ of habeas corpus.”
Elaborating on his claims, Alvarez tried to show that virtually every facet of
his legal representation had been marred by ineffective-assistance-of-trial-
counsel (“IATC”) ultimately caused by the violation of the Vienna
Convention.
The state trial court entered proposed findings of fact and conclusions
of law rejecting habeas relief in May 2008. In so doing, it discussed
extensively the claims raised in both the initial habeas application and the
arguments from the supplemental briefs. In 2008, the TCCA adopted most
of the findings and conclusions and denied state habeas relief. Ex parte
Alvarez, WR-No. 62,426-01, 2008 WL 4357801 (Tex. Crim. App. Sept. 24,
2008) (unpublished). The TCCA did not, however, adopt specific findings
or conclusions related to ineffective assistance of trial counsel. Id. In regard
to ineffectiveness issues, the TCCA stated only that the habeas court’s
findings “relate to arguments rather than new claims.” Id.
Alvarez timely sought federal habeas relief in 2008. But in 2010, he
successfully persuaded the federal district court to stay its hand pending state
court exhaustion of claims concerning the Houston Crime Lab’s forensic
evidence. In this second state habeas proceeding, Alvarez alleged a Brady
violation concerning the Crime Lab’s analysis of blood samples offered at
conjunction with the claim already before the trial court.” Ex parte Alvarez, No.
WR-62,426-01 (Tex. Crim. App. June 6, 2007).
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trial, and he alleged misconduct by Crime Lab personnel and the prosecutors
for their introduction of “tainted” and “sloppy” DNA evidence at trial. The
TCCA dismissed the application as an abuse of the writ, and therefore
procedurally barred. Ex parte Alvarez, WR-No. 62,426-02, 2010 WL
3572246 (Tex. Crim. App. Sept. 15, 2010).
Counsel amended Alvarez’s federal petition in 2011 to assert twenty-
two claims, which the State answered. But he then obtained another stay of
federal proceedings to file a third state habeas petition. Rather than file the
state petition expeditiously, counsel unsuccessfully pursued litigation in state
court to obtain investigation fees for the third writ. In 2014, counsel finally
sought state habeas relief on the ground that trial counsel was ineffective and
Alvarez was constitutionally deprived of counsel because Reyes slept during
parts of the trial. 3 The TCCA dismissed this successive habeas application
for abuse of the writ. See Ex parte Alvarez, WR-No. 62,426-04, 2015 WL
1955072 (Tex. Crim. App. April 29, 2015).
In 2017, nearly a decade after the federal habeas case commenced, the
district court denied Alvarez all relief in an exhaustive 78-page opinion. The
district court also denied his requests for investigation funds and for a
certificate of appealability.
Alvarez then appealed, filed his motion for a COA on June 20, 2018,
and briefed the district court’s order denying federal funding. These matters
were thoroughly briefed by both parties.
A year later, on August 22, 2019, Alvarez moved to supplement the
appellate record, and/or remand to the district court, and stay or abate the
federal court proceedings so he could pursue “new” claims in state court. In
3
This application was supported by reference to two juror affidavits that had been
signed in 2008 and offered during Alvarez’s initial state habeas proceedings.
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truth, his Sixth Amendment claim was not “new” but had allegedly been
made stronger by an affidavit counsel had obtained only three days earlier
(August 19, 2019) from trial counsel Frumencio Reyes. Although Reyes had
filed three affidavits earlier in the habeas proceedings that never mentioned
his physical state, he now attested that he might have been unable to
participate fully in the trial, and he might have slept during some of the
proceedings since he was recovering from a hospital stay that occurred
shortly before the capital trial. Fortuitously, Reyes’s co-counsel Denninger
died in 2011 and was no longer available to opine about this claim. 4 The state
vigorously opposed this motion. We denied the motion to supplement the
record.
This court granted a COA on the three claims raised by Alvarez (a
“sleeping lawyer” claim, a Wiggins claim, and claims regarding the Houston
Crime Lab), carried the motion to expand the record with the case, ordered
supplemental briefing, and held oral argument. Having done so, we conclude
that the claims fail.
III. Standard of Review
When reviewing a district court’s denial of a writ of habeas corpus,
the court reviews its conclusions of law de novo and its factual findings for
clear error. See Broadnax v. Lumpkin, 987 F.3d 400, 406 (5th Cir. 2021), cert.
denied, 142 S. Ct. 859 (2022) (citation omitted).
4
Attorney Reyes himself passed away in 2023, while this appeal was under
submission.
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IV. Analysis
Deprivation of Counsel Claim
For his “sleeping lawyer” claim, Alvarez asserts that because one of
his two trial counsel slept during the trial,5 he is entitled to relief under the
Sixth Amendment, Strickland, and Cronic. We disagree.
As an initial matter, the parties debated in supplemental briefing to
this court whether we are bound by the strict standards of review under
AEDPA or must adopt de novo review. The district court found the sleeping
lawyer claim deficient under either standard. But the district court also ably
explained why it concluded that the sleeping-lawyer claim was actually
adjudicated by the state courts on the merits and was not dismissed by the
state courts on procedural grounds. See Alvarez v. Davis, No. 4:09–CV–
3040, 2017 WL 4844570, at *24–26 (S.D. Tex. Oct. 25, 2015). We need not
recapitulate its reasoning. The upshot is that although neither the state
habeas trial court nor the TCCA mentioned the sleeping-lawyer claims
expressly in their respective rulings, the juror affidavits were before those
courts, and we conclude that those rulings were on the merits. We are guided
by the Supreme Court’s decision in Johnson v. Williams, 568 U.S. 289, 133
S. Ct. 1088 (2013), in which a state court had ruled against the defendant in
an opinion that addressed some issues but did not expressly address the
federal claim in question. The Court held that in such a situation, it must be
presumed, subject to rebuttal, that the state court adjudicated the federal
claim on the merits. Id. at 292–93, 133 S. Ct. at 1091–92. 6 This court recently
applied Williams in the Jimenez case, in which we emphasized both (1) the
application of the presumption even in cases where the state courts addressed
5
See Affidavit of Juror Joseph Millspaugh; Affidavit of Juror Carol Frierson.
6
Williams, in turn, relied on the Supreme Court’s earlier precedent in Harrington
v. Richter, 562 U.S. 86, 131 S. Ct. 770 (2011).
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some but not all claims raised by a habeas petitioner and (2) the heavy burden
that a petitioner bears to overcome the Williams presumption. Jimenez v.
Guerrero, 133 F.4th 483 (5th Cir. 2025). Alvarez has neither attempted nor
made a persuasive rebuttal of the Williams/Jimenez presumption in this case.
Consequently, there is no indication that the state courts did not adjudicate
the sleeping-lawyer claim on the merits, and it is subject to review under
AEDPA.
1. No “unreasonable” application of clearly established Federal law.
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1).
Under AEDPA, a state conviction can be overturned by federal habeas
courts only if the state court’s decision was “contrary to, or involved an
unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the
Supreme Court of the United States . . . .” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) (emphasis
added), or if the state court decision amounted to an unreasonable
application of the facts to the law. Id. § 2254(d)(2); Harrington v. Richter, 562
U.S. 86, 100, 131 S. Ct. 770, 785 (2011). Drawing from this court’s recent
discussion in Jimenez, 133 F.4th at 492, the “unreasonable application” of
Supreme Court law “requires a prisoner to show far more than that the state
court’s decision was merely wrong or even clear error.” Shinn v. Kayer, 592
U.S. 111, 118, 141 S. Ct. 517, 523 (2020) (per curiam) (quotations omitted).
“Rather, the [AEDPA] relitigation bar forecloses relief unless the prisoner
can show the state court was so wrong that the error was ‘well understood
and comprehended in existing law beyond any possibility for fairminded
disagreement.’” Langley v. Prince, 926 F.3d 145, 156 (5th Cir. 2019) (en banc)
(quoting Shoop v. Hill, 586 U.S. 45, 48, 139 S. Ct. 504, 506 (2019) (per
curiam)). And as Jimenez further reasoned, “[i]t must be ‘“beyond the
realm of possibility that a fairminded jurist could” agree with the state
court.’” Jimenez, 133 F.4th at 492 (quoting Langley, 926 F.3d at 156)).
These strong commands of deference to state courts’ interpretations of
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governing Supreme Court law derive from the Supreme Court’s explanation
that under AEDPA, “the writ of habeas corpus serves only as a ‘guard against
extreme malfunctions in the state criminal justice systems’ and not as a
‘substitute for ordinary error correction through appeal.’” Jimenez, 133
F.4th at 491 (quoting Richter, 562 U.S. at 102–03, 131 S. Ct. at 786).
Our dissenting colleague asserts that the Supreme Court “recently
reminded us that ‘[g]eneral legal principles can constitute clearly established
law for purposes of AEDPA so long as they are holdings of th[e Supreme]
Court.’” See post, at 41–42 (Richman, J., dissenting) (citing Andrew v.
White, 145 S. Ct. 75, 82 (2025)). Nothing in Andrew, however, supports the
legal proposition that the dissent would apply here. In Andrew, the Supreme
Court relied on its “clearly established” rule, a “holding” under AEDPA,
that a violation of the Due Process clause may occur from the introduction of
evidence that is unduly prejudicial to the defense. Id. at 81. The specific
issue in Andrew was whether certain evidence prejudicial to the capital
defendant violated this “holding.” The “holding,” in turn, was directly
related to the evidentiary issue presented to the courts. Andrew is inapposite
on the facts and the precise legal issue before the Court.
Unfortunately for Alvarez and the dissent, there is no clearly
established Supreme Court law holding that a defendant was subjected to a
violation of the Sixth Amendment where one counsel allegedly performed
defectively but a second, engaged attorney effectively participated in
representing the defendant. The dissent cites no case because there is none
even remotely on point. Merely incanting a general supposition that
counsel’s absence during a critical stage of the proceedings constitutes a denial
of constitutionally effective counsel is not enough under AEDPA. Indeed,
relying on the governing Supreme Court cases, two panels of this court have
held there cannot be constitutionally inadequate counsel when two attorneys
represent a defendant and the effectiveness of only one is attacked. See
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McFarland v. Lumpkin, 26 F.4th 314 (5th Cir. 2022); Hall v. Thaler, 504
F.Appx. 269 (5th Cir. 2012). And as will be seen, even if there were such
“clearly established law,” there is no basis for its application on the
barebones claims about the trial here.
A. (i) No Strickland ineffectiveness.
This court must initially decide whether the TCCA’s rejection of
Alvarez’s sleeping lawyer claim “unreasonably applied” Strickland. The
Strickland test for constitutionally ineffective counsel includes two
requirements, that (a) counsel’s performance fell below a standard of
professionally reasonable conduct, and (b) counsel’s inadequacy
“prejudiced” the defense, resulting in a verdict that is not “reliable.”
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687, 104 S. Ct. at 2064.
We hold that the TCCA did not unreasonably apply Strickland.
Initially, as will be discussed further below, there is nothing in the state court
records about counsel’s having slept during the trial other than the two juror
affidavits executed almost a decade post-trial.7 A petitioner has the burden
to prove counsel’s ineffectiveness, Carter v. Johnson, 131 F.3d 452, 463 (5th
Cir. 1997), yet there is no basis in the record to show how Reyes’s sleeping
interfered with his performance at trial. It is merely conjecture by the dissent
that Reyes may not have handled numerous witnesses and
cross-examinations effectively. The dissent argues for pages on the supposed
meaning of a total of five paragraphs in two juror affidavits. These affidavits
are notably vague about the facts. And they are implicitly contradicted by
three affidavits of counsel Reyes, executed during the state proceedings, that
7
In McFarland, by contrast, the state court record revealed that the judge had
admonished counsel during trial about his sleeping. 163 S.W.3d at 751. Similarly, in
Burdine, the state habeas court determined that the trial judge and several others watched
the sole counsel for the defendant sleeping through large portions of trial. 262 F.3d at 339–
40.
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said not a word about his own “incompetence” to try the case. In fact, in a
notable pretrial conference, the trial judge complimented Mr. Reyes, when
Reyes claimed, “They [opposing counsel] took advantage of it while I was
outside, too, Judge.” The court responded, “Nobody takes advantage of
you, Reyes.” 8
Further, Alvarez’s attempt to demonstrate constitutional
incompetence on the part of co-counsel Denninger is perfunctory and
without record support. Denninger conducted about half of the juror voir
dires, crossed and directly examined a number of witnesses, gave one of the
two closing arguments, and frequently interjected at trial with objections and
clarifications. The TCCA could therefore have reasonably concluded that
Alvarez did not bear his burden to prove ineffectiveness of counsel overall.
Cf. Wright v. Van Patten, 552 U.S. 120, 125–26, 128 S. Ct. 743, 746–47
(2008); McFarland, 163 S.W.3d at 753–55.
As for prejudice, that, too, is implied only from two jurors’ lay
opinions, not proof, that counsel for Alvarez did not mount a serious defense
because of Reyes’s sleeping. 9 The state court could reasonably have
8
A broader look at this colloquy also challenges the dissent’s hypothesis that
counsel Denninger was not doing his job, as Denninger was objecting to the introduction of
allegedly prejudicial photographs of a crime scene. Denninger noted that he was not trying
to double-team the prosecution, but they had done it first. Then Reyes became involved.
19 RR:137-38.
9
In concluding that Reyes’s sleeping automatically prejudiced Alvarez, the dissent
neither identifies a single question that Reyes should have asked on cross-examination nor
illustrates how those questions could outweigh the overwhelming evidence against Alvarez
at both the guilt and punishment phase. In past cases, when habeas petitioners could not
articulate a question that should have been asked, that omission weighed heavily against
the habeas petitioner. See Jenkins v. Vannoy, 2018 WL 11301544, at *2 (5th Cir. Nov. 21,
2018) (denying certificate of appealability on Strickland claim where defendant did not
“explain what additional questions about his arrest counsel should have asked officers”);
United States v. Tucker, 12 F.4th 804, 818 (D.C. Cir. 2021) (denying federal post-conviction
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determined that the record was insufficient to show prejudice pursuant to
Strickland. As the district court held, the TCCA did not unreasonably reject
Alvarez’s Strickland claim.
(ii) No “unreasonable determination” of the facts in light of the
evidence. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2).
Alvarez does not specifically refer to this AEDPA provision, which
denies federal habeas relief unless the state court’s decision was “based on
an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented
in the State proceeding.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2). Instead, he simply
assumes that two juror affidavits, filed late in state proceedings and untested
in an adversary hearing, establish that Reyes slept during large portions of the
trial, and Reyes was thereby disabled from serving as lead counsel.
But the dissent parlays the juror affidavits into a frontal attack on the
state courts’ implicit findings. In reality, only two or three paragraphs in each
affidavit focus on lead counsel’s alleged sleeping. Read in toto, the affidavits
spend considerably more space emphasizing the overall strength of the
prosecution case against what the jurors viewed as the lack of energy and less
impressive performance of defense counsel. The dissent recites the
operative paragraphs of each affidavit over and over as if repetition will
increase their credibility. The dissent assays the entire trial record and
purports to find that Reyes had by far the greatest trial responsibility, but that
Reyes somehow was unable to perform his duties notwithstanding that he
examined on direct- and cross-examination a couple dozen witnesses. The
dissent claims that the State “had the opportunity” but didn’t offer contrary
affidavits. Two answers are appropriate. First, the state does not bear the
burden of proof. Second, counsel Denninger’s testimony would have been
relief where the defendant “identifies no question his attorney should have asked that
would have impeached [a government witness] or exculpated [the defendant]”).
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the most effective proof of Reyes’s alleged incompetence, but Alvarez
offered no affidavit from him while he was alive.
The problem is that these factual suppositions conflict with the
implicit contrary findings of the TCCA and AEDPA’s mandate that if the
state courts did not “unreasonably” determine the facts, Alvarez cannot
succeed. Neither Alvarez nor the dissent makes any attempt to demonstrate
by “clear and convincing evidence” that the presumption of correctness
attaching to TCCA’s factfindings is overcome. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1). The
record here shows that the state court’s factual determinations were not
unreasonable.
To begin, neither Alvarez nor the dissent overcomes the inconvenient
fact that another defense lawyer also participated actively in the trial and
indeed had been involved in representing Alvarez for over a year before trial,
far longer than Attorney Reyes. In addition, we and the district court have
reviewed the trial record and found that Attorney Denninger was present at
all times and “made various objections, questioned experts on voir dire,
cross-examined witnesses, and argued before the jury.” Denninger was fully
engaged in the case. The trial court record nowhere indicates that the trial
judge admonished Reyes about sleeping or had to wake him up or encouraged
him to pay attention; there is nothing on the face of the trial court record
suggesting that Reyes slept. In fact, as noted above, during a lengthy pretrial
conference handled by both Reyes and Denninger several weeks before trial
commenced, the trial judge appeared to compliment Attorney Reyes, as he
said, “[no]body takes advantage of you, Reyes.”
Looking to events post-trial, Alvarez’s direct appeal raised thirty-nine
issues, none of which bore on counsel’s somnolence. His initial habeas
petition was filed by two accomplished capital defense attorneys, and they
never alluded to constitutionally inadequate, much less “absent” defense
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No. 18-70001
counsel. Attorney Reyes himself authored affidavits during the state habeas
proceedings, which covered numerous aspects of his representation of
Alvarez. But neither affidavit even hinted that he had been infirm during the
trial. To be sure, the two jurors’ affidavits impugn Reyes for sleeping
repeatedly, but there are no other affidavits, from jurors or court personnel,
corroborating them. Importantly, Attorney Denninger never filed an
affidavit concerning the case. 10 It is bold for the dissent to exhibit such
assurance, based on this inconclusive record, that Reyes was “absent during
a critical stage”—despite the fact that he examined or cross-examined many
witnesses—and that Denninger’s constant presence did nothing to enhance
the representation. 11 It is even bolder to contradict both the district court’s
evaluation of the evidence, which we review for clear error, and the TCCA’s
implicit findings. Higgins v. Cain, 720 F.3d 255, 260 (5th Cir. 2013).
The dissent makes much of the TCCA’s decision not to adopt the trial
court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding ineffective
assistance of counsel. See Ex parte Alvarez, No. WR-62,426-01, 2008 WL
4357801, at *1 (Tex. Crim. App. Sept. 24, 2008) (per curiam) (unpublished).
But the TCCA’s explanation merely stated that those findings “relate to
arguments rather than new claims.” Id. And it must be remembered that
Alvarez had raised literally dozens of complaints about trial counsel’s
10
Conveniently for Alvarez’s later contentions, Denninger died in 2011, three
years after the juror affidavits were entered in the state court record, but eight years before
Reyes filed the 2019 affidavit in which he fell on his sword and suggested he “might have”
slept during parts of the trial.
11
The dissent purports to reinforce its conclusion, that Alvarez was “denied”
counsel who was allegedly sleeping before conducting cross-examination, with a court rule
or custom that only one attorney for each side can examine a witness. That is fine, but it is
only supposition that counsel Denninger sat like a bump on a log and never proposed
questions for cross on Reyes’s witnesses. Alvarez never asserts as much, because Alvarez’s
briefing is bereft of any specifics about the alleged sleeping other than the suspiciously
similar, decade-old affidavits.
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performance. It is a stretch to infer that the TCCA’s refusal to adopt the
habeas court’s rejection of those dozens of “arguments” implies that the
TCCA harbored doubts about the singular issue whether Reyes was sleeping
during any “critical” portion of the trial.
Alvarez had the obligation to prove the “unreasonableness” of the
TCCA’s implicit factfindings under AEDPA. Alvarez never made his proof.
B. No Cronic Claim
The dissent also suggests, without conclusively resolving, that
according to United States v. Cronic, 446 U.S. 648, 104 S. Ct. 2039 (1984),
counsel’s alleged sleeping was so severe as to constitute a constructive denial
of effective counsel pursuant to the Sixth Amendment and therefore a
violation for which no showing of prejudice is required. While it expresses
uncertainty about the issue, the dissent worries that the state court might
have unreasonably failed to apply Cronic. We disagree that the holding of
Cronic is even potentially applicable to this case.
The dissent begins with its historical recitation of cases concerning
counsel’s “absence” during critical portions of trial. None of these deals
with cases in which only one of two counsel is alleged to have been absent.
Instead, the dissent starts with Holloway v. Arkansas, 435 U.S. 475, 489, 98
S. Ct. 1173, 1181 (1978). Holloway concerned conflicted counsel, not
“absent” counsel, and its operative language discusses situations where a
defendant is “deprived of the assistance of his attorney….” Id. Not two
attorneys. Nonetheless, the dissents builds on this “holding” by citing other
cases, including Cronic, that are all factually different from Alvarez’s. 12
12
Geders v. United States, 425 U.S. 80, 96 S. Ct. 1330 (1976); Bell v. Cone, 535 U.S.
685, 122 S. Ct. 1843 (2002); Powell v. Alabama, 287 U.S. 45, 53 S. Ct. 55 (1932); Glasser v.
United States, 315 U.S. 60, 62 S. Ct. 457 (1942); Satterwhite v. Texas, 486 U.S. 249, 108
S. Ct. 1792 (1988).
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Unsurprisingly, the Supreme Court has previously confronted the
intersection of Cronic and Strickland Sixth Amendment claims in the AEDPA
context. In Wright v. Van Patten, 552 U.S. 120, 128 S. Ct. 743 (2008) (per
curiam), a unanimous Court reversed the Seventh Circuit’s grant of habeas
where a lawyer had participated in his client’s state court plea hearing only
by telephone, leaving the defendant to stand alone before the judge. Van
Patten v. Deppisch, 434 F.3d 1038 (7th Cir. 2006). The appeals court held that
the state court’s rejection of the petitioner’s Cronic claim was an
unreasonable application of Cronic’s clearly established principle: that
counsel’s “absence” was so deleterious to the defendant’s rights as to
require an automatic grant of relief without further inquiry into counsel’s
performance. Id. at 1042–43. The Supreme Court admonished that “[n]o
decision of this Court, however, squarely addresses the issue . . . , or clearly
establishes that Cronic should replace Strickland in this novel factual
context.” Van Patten, 552 U.S. at 125, 128 S. Ct. at 746. The Court added,
“[e]ven if we agree with Van Patten that a lawyer physically present will tend
to perform better than one on the phone, it does not necessarily follow that
mere telephone contact amounted to total absence or prevented [counsel]
from assisting the accused, so as to entail application of Cronic.” Id. (internal
quotations omitted). Justice Stevens concurred in the judgment,
emphasizing that Cronic did not cover a case involving counsel’s absence only
from open court, and he agreed that under AEDPA, the question is “whether
the Wisconsin court’s narrower reading of [Cronic than that of the federal
appeals court] was ‘objectively unreasonable.’” Id. at 128, 128 S. Ct. at 748
(citing Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 409, 120 S. Ct. 1495 (2000)). It was
not. Hence, “[b]ecause our cases give no clear answer to the question
presented,” the Supreme Court unanimously concluded that the state court
did not unreasonably apply clearly established Federal law. Id. at 126, 128
S. Ct. at 747.
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The Supreme Court has not spoken about the intersection of Cronic
and Strickland following Van Patten. Nor has the Court found any Cronic
violation since Van Patten. Nor has the Court confronted a case where one
co-counsel allegedly slept during parts of the trial, while the other co-counsel
fully participated in the trial as well. The Court has not held that Cronic must
replace Strickland analysis where one of two co-counsels is interstitially
“absent” from trial. In sum, the instant case does not meaningfully differ
from Van Patten. 13
Consequently, there is no basis under AEDPA for this court to rule in
this also novel context that Cronic’s “holding” applies where two counsel
represented the petitioner, and only one became “absent.” To expand on
this point, Cronic was embellished by Bell v. Cone, 535 U.S. 685, 697, 122
S. Ct. 1843, 1851 (2002), which noted three circumstances in which prejudice
is presumed, and counsel’s “failure must be complete”: first, the complete
denial of counsel “at a critical stage;” second, if counsel entirely fails to
subject the prosecutor’s case to meaningful adversary testing; third, where
counsel is called on to represent a client under circumstances where
competent counsel likely could not. Id. at 695, 122 S. Ct. at 1850. As the
district court found, Alvarez was not “denied” counsel, because he had two
lawyers, at least one of whom was entirely at his service throughout the trial.
Neither counsel utterly failed to meaningfully test the prosecution’s case
with evidence and cross-examination. The face of the trial record reveals no
lapse in counsel’s trial conduct. And as the next section of this opinion
demonstrates, the two counsel for Alvarez were not constitutionally
13
In fact, to extend Cronic to a “holding” that a “denial” of counsel under the
Sixth Amendment includes a “denial” of part of the defense team also transgresses the
Teague doctrine, Teague v. Lane, 489 U.S. 288, 109 S. Ct. 1060 (1989), which is
incorporated in AEDPA. See Horn v. Banks, 536 U.S. 266, 272, 122 S. Ct. 2147, 2151
(2002).
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ineffective in their preparation for and handling of his mitigation defense.
The third Bell circumstance does not apply. 14 The TCCA did not
“unreasonably” fail to follow Cronic or Bell on these facts. 15
Whether to remand to state court
The dissent contends that this court ought to grant Alvarez’s motion
to remand to state court to consider Attorney Reyes’s affidavit, which as
noted above was not filed until this appeal was pending—i.e., nearly twenty
years after Alvarez’s conviction, and numerous state court and federal
district court rulings. This request is untimely. Nothing prevented Reyes
from acknowledging earlier that he “might have” “sometimes” fallen asleep
during the trial, such as when he filed previous affidavits in this case. As the
14
Reinforcing the inapplicability, or at least debatability, of Cronic, the TCCA itself
found Cronic inapplicable where two lawyers represented the defendant and one was
allegedly sleeping during trial, in a decision that preceded its denial of Alvarez’s petition.
Ex Parte McFarland, 163 S.W.3d 743, 753 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005). This court has twice
rejected a Cronic claim where two counsel represented the petitioner. McFarland v.
Lumpkin, 26 F.4th 314 (5th Cir. 2022); Hall v. Thaler, 504 F. App’x 269, 277–78 (5th Cir.
2012). In McFarland, the court noted that it was “aware of no case where a sleeping co-
counsel alone triggers Cronic’s presumption of prejudice.” 26 F.4th at 320. Because the
petitioner in McFarland had “enjoyed effective assistance by [co-counsel],” the court
concluded that the state court decision was “not contrary to or an unreasonable application
of clearly established Supreme Court precedent.” Id. McFarland, as well as Hall, cannot
supplant clearly established Federal law of the Supreme Court under AEDPA. But their
reasoning demonstrates at least that reasonable jurists could differ about the scope of
Cronic, proving that the state court here did not “blunder so badly that every fairminded
jurist would disagree” with its decision. Mays v. Hines, 592 U.S. 385, 392, 141 S. Ct. 1145,
1149 (2021) (per curiam).
15
That this court and others cited by the dissent have affirmed the application of
Cronic in “sleeping lawyer” cases is not legally relevant to AEDPA. But see Burdine v.
Johnson, 262 F.3d 336 (5th Cir. 2001) (en banc); United States v. Ragin, 820 F.3d 609, (4th
Cir. 2016); Muniz v. Smith, 647 F.3d 619, 621 (6th Cir. 2011); Tippins v. Walker, 77 F.3d
682 (2d Cir. 1996); Javor v. United States, 724 F.2d 831, 834–35 (9th Cir. 1984). Even if
they were relevant, however, in none of these cases did two counsel represent the
defendant.
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No. 18-70001
dissent says, he admits that he was “previously untruthful” in denying that
he slept. There is simply no plausible excuse for a capital defendant’s trial
counsel to wait for decades and then suddenly admit to possible
constitutional ineffectiveness. To stay our consideration of this appeal and
remand to the state courts for further consideration would mock the Supreme
Court’s holding in Rhines v. Weber, 544 U.S. 269, 277–78, 125 S. Ct. 1528,
1534–35 (2005), which noted that any such exercise of our discretion must
take account of AEDPA’s intent to streamline federal habeas corpus
proceedings. Alvarez presents no new, unexhausted claim, which was the
subject of Rhines, but only additional evidence that purportedly supports the
two juror affidavits. New evidence that could have been obtained with due
diligence as soon as the trial was ended cannot fall within Rhines. 16 Indeed,
because Alvarez bore the burden to prove his claim about counsel’s sleeping,
the best evidence would have been an affidavit from co-counsel Denninger—
but Alvarez made little of this claim until after Denninger died. To stay
consideration of this matter in the federal courts would constitute an abuse
of our discretion.
The Wiggins Claim
Alvarez frames another ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim
around Wiggins and the recent Supreme Court decision in Andrus. See
16
The same result obtains even if Rhines applies to unexhausted evidence, as well
as unexhausted claims, as at least one court has held. See Gonzalez v. Wong, 667 F.3d 965,
977–86 (9th Cir. 2011). Gonzalez suggested that unexhausted evidence might merit a stay
if a petitioner has good cause for failing to present the evidence earlier and has a potentially
meritorious claim. Not only could Alvarez have obtained the affidavit with due diligence,
but also the affidavit does nothing to undermine that Alvarez had a second attorney whose
effectiveness was not credibly challenged. In other words, Alvarez both lacks good cause
for not presenting this affidavit at an earlier stage of litigation and cannot plausibly argue
that the affidavit renders his claim meritorious. Thus, even if we assume, without deciding,
that Gonzalez is correct, that case does not render a stay appropriate here.
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Wiggins v. Smith, 539 U.S. 510, 123 S. Ct. 2527 (2003) (inadequate
investigation of mitigation evidence can violate Sixth Amendment right to
effective assistance of counsel); Andrus v. Texas, 590 U.S. 806, 140 S. Ct.
1875 (2020) (failure to provide known, existing, and easily discovered
mitigation evidence during a trial’s punishment phase can violate the Sixth
Amendment). In support of his claim, Alvarez asserts that trial counsel failed
to investigate his personal history and mental deficiencies deeply enough and
failed to present sufficiently detailed mitigating evidence during the
punishment phase of his trial. Therefore, Alvarez argues, his counsel were
constitutionally ineffective under Strickland, Wiggins, and Andrus.
As a threshold question, the parties here debate what standard of
review applies to this claim in federal court due to the procedural
complexities that evolved in the state habeas proceedings. The district court
addressed the uncertainty by review under both the “doubly deferential”
standard required by AEDPA, Richter, 562 U.S. at 101, 131 S. Ct. at 785, as
well as the de novo standard applicable to Strickland claims of ineffective
assistance. Even under the more lenient standard, the Wiggins claim is
unavailing. 17
Under de novo review, to establish that his counsel performed
ineffectively, Alvarez must demonstrate both that his counsel’s performance
was deficient and that the deficient performance prejudiced his defense.
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687, 104 S. Ct. at 2064. A failure to establish either
17
As the district court concluded, Alvarez conceded that his Wiggins claim was
fairly presented and exhausted in state court. Alvarez v. Davis, 2017 WL 4844570, at *25
(S.D. Tex. Oct. 25, 2017). That would mean AEDPA bars relitigation of the claim unless
the state court’s adjudication was contrary to or unreasonably applied governing Supreme
Court precedent. Because Alvarez belatedly parries this concession by invoking the alleged
incompetence of his state habeas counsel, we act out of prudence in assessing this claim
pursuant to the non-AEDPA-constrained Strickland standard.
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deficient performance or prejudice makes it unnecessary to examine the
other prong. Id. at 697, 104 S. Ct. at 1069. “Surmounting Strickland’s high
bar is never an easy task.” Padilla v. Kentucky, 559 U.S. 356, 371, 130 S. Ct.
1473, 1485 (2010).
A claim for ineffectiveness at the sentencing stage of a capital trial
requires proof that counsel failed in their duty to “discover all reasonably
available mitigating evidence,” “or to make a reasonable decision that makes
particular investigations unnecessary.” Wiggins v. Smith, 539 U.S. 510, 523-
24, 123 S. Ct. 2527, 2536–37 (2003). In this case, Alvarez asserts that counsel
failed to investigate and offer mitigating evidence that Alvarez (1) suffers
from organic brain damage and PTSD, (2) experienced poverty, loss of loved
ones, violence and terror, (3) has a good character, and (4) has extenuating
reasons for gang involvement. As will be seen, these claims, which merely
accuse trial counsel of just not doing “enough,” are approached warily by
this court. Carty v. Thaler, 583 F.3d 244, 258 (5th Cir. 2009). The court
must give trial counsels’ judgments “a heavy measure of deference” on
review. Wiggins, 539 U.S. at 522, 123 S. Ct. at 2535; see also United States v.
Bernard, 762 F.3d 467, 474 (5th Cir. 2014). In sum, to establish that
counsel’s performance was constitutionally deficient, a convicted defendant
must prove that trial counsel unintentionally “made errors so serious that
counsel was not functioning as the ‘counsel’ guaranteed . . . by the Sixth
Amendment.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687, 104 S. Ct. at 2064.
Even if Alvarez could show that trial counsel were deficient, such
deficiencies “must be prejudicial to the defense in order to constitute
ineffective assistance under the Constitution.” Id. at 692, 104 S. Ct. at 2067.
To establish such prejudice, Alvarez must show that there was a reasonable
probability “that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the
proceeding would have been different.” Id. at 694, 104 S. Ct. 2068. “A
reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine the confidence
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in the outcome.” Id. This requires a “substantial,” not just “conceivable,”
likelihood of a different result. Richter, 562 U.S. at 112, 131 S. Ct. at 792.
In support of his ineffectiveness claim regarding the penalty phase,
Alvarez offers additional evidence of the types noted above and asserts
generally that trial counsel failed to explore “red flags,” failed to present a
cohesive mitigation narrative, and failed to investigate and rebut the State’s
case. Alvarez likens his situation to the facts underlying Andrus v. Texas. See
590 U.S. 806, 140 S. Ct. 1875 (2020). Other than the later-decided Andrus,
the district court addressed each of the Wiggins issues raised by Alvarez and
demonstrated their failure on the merits. We agree with the district court
that none of Alvarez’s arguments have merit. Moreover, Andrus is inapt.
When ruling on Alvarez’s “red flags” argument, the district court
observed that trial counsel employed an expert psychologist for trial
preparation and testimony. Dr. Laval repeatedly interacted with Alvarez
before trial, interviewing him several times and administering two tests.
Nothing in his interactions or testing suggested that Alvarez had any mental
or psychotic disorder. As pointed out by the district court, though Alvarez
now provides an affidavit in which a psychologist says it is possible that
Alvarez suffers from brain damage and PTSD, the expert hired for the trial
said that such conditions did not exist at the time of the murders. There is
nothing in the record to suggest that Dr. Laval’s expertise was unreliable at
the time he provided his assistance. Because of this, the district court held
that Alvarez did not prove that a reasonable trial attorney should have made
a more thorough investigation into mental health issues. We agree. Alvarez,
2017 WL 4844570, at *30.
Regarding Alvarez’s argument that trial counsel’s punishment phase
narrative was deficient, along with counsel’s investigation into and rebuttal
of the State’s case against him, the district court likewise found Alvarez’s
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arguments unavailing. The district court points out that Alvarez’s defense
team was not unaware of the State’s case and the evidence sustaining it. The
defense team made “many trips to the Assistant District Attorney’s office to
review the open pending files,” a fact that Alvarez conceded. Alvarez v.
Davis, 4:09-CV-3040, 2017 WL 4844570, Doc. No. 1, Exh. 34 (S.D. Tex).
Additionally, as they investigated mitigation evidence, trial counsel not only
availed themselves of Dr. Laval but also, according to trial counsel’s affidavit,
“had numerous meetings with family members to determine the mental and
emotional state of Mr. Alvarez.” February 19, 2003 Affidavit of Frumencio
Reyes. And trial counsel further stated under oath that he “planned the
strategy of the trial with members of the family and Mr. Alvarez himself.”
Id. While Alvarez has not clarified what role he played in fashioning the
defense, any review of these matters must be done in light of Alvarez’s
apparent choice or endorsement of the strategy. In other words, the narrative
employed at trial was plotted out by Alvarez, his family, and trial counsel
together, and they were all involved in developing Alvarez’s mitigation case.
Finally, as the district court found, everything that Alvarez’s current
counsel asserts should have been provided to the jury in mitigation was
adduced by trial counsel from the six witnesses who testified. The jurors
were given evidence that Alvarez had witnessed fatal violence to those he
loved, that this was transformative, that his childhood was unsettled by
separation from his mother and several moves, that being a member of a gang
gave him a sense of purpose, and that his violent lifestyle involved his
unresolved feelings about his father’s death. Jurors also were told that the
murder of Alvarez’s close friend triggered again the trauma he had suffered
from his father’s killing and motivated his gang violence. Dr. Laval further
informed jurors that Alvarez likely would not engage in gang violence while
incarcerated and was not a future threat to society. As the district court
found, “the evidence presented at trial travels much the same pathways and
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reaches the same end—an explanation for Alvarez’s gang membership,
descent into violence, and ultimate commission of the murders.” Alvarez,
2017 WL 4844570, at *30. Alvarez provides no evidence or argument that
unsettles the district court’s findings.
In addition to the above arguments, Alvarez now relies on Andrus v.
Texas to support his Wiggins claim. Andrus, however, is easily distinguished.
During the punishment phase of Andrus’s capital murder trial, Andrus’s
counsel only called as witnesses his mother and his father, who had not seen
Andrus in years. Andrus, 590 U.S. at 807–11, 140 S. Ct. at 1878-79. After the
defense rested, the court questioned Andrus’s defense counsel about why he
did not call more witnesses. In response, Andrus’s counsel then called a
doctor, a prison counselor, and (briefly) Andrus himself. Id. at 809–11, 140
S. Ct. at 1879. Andrus was sentenced to death. Id. At the ensuing state
habeas hearing, Andrus offered a “tidal wave” of mitigation not presented at
trial. Id. Andrus provided evidence that he had suffered extreme neglect,
privation, violence, and abuse as a child. Id. at 809–11, 140 S. Ct. at 1879-80.
He had struggled with mental-health issues, including “affective psychosis,”
hearing voices, and attempted suicide. Information bearing on all of these
facts was available to defense counsel before the punishment phase of
Andrus’s trial. Id. at 811–12, 140 S. Ct. at 1880. Based on the “tidal wave”
of mitigation evidence, the trial court found counsel ineffective upon
consideration of Andrus’s habeas petition, but the TCCA disagreed. Id. at
810–13, 140 S. Ct. at 1879–81. On appeal, the Supreme Court concluded that
counsel was barely acquainted with the witnesses, inexcusably did not know
that Andrus had attempted suicide, culpably did not know that Andrus’s bad
experiences in youth detention had traumatized him, failed to talk to
Andrus’s siblings, failed to “uncover” Andrus’s obvious PTSD, and ignored
Andrus’s mental-health issues. Id. at 815–17, 140 S. Ct. at 1882–83. The
Supreme Court vacated the TCCA’s opinion, and remanded Andrus’s case
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for an evaluation of whether Andrus’s counsel’s ineffectiveness was
prejudicial. Id. at 823–24, 140 S. Ct. at 1887.
Alvarez’s case does not compare. Alvarez’s trial counsel knew and
presented information about Alvarez’s personal history. Alvarez’s trial
counsel spent a good deal of time examining the prosecution’s files,
preparing the case with Alvarez and his family, obtaining and using a mental-
health expert, and took “[e]very precaution . . . to protect Mr. Alvarez’s
statutory rights.” February 19, 2003 Affidavit of Frumencio Reyes. Unlike
the trial court in Andrus, the trial court evaluating Alvarez’s state habeas
petition did not find ineffective assistance of counsel. In other words,
Alvarez has not presented a “tidal wave” of qualitatively different or new
evidence warranting relief, and he has shown neither ineffectiveness nor
prejudice on his Wiggins claim.
Given the district court’s thorough review of the record and detailed
analysis of Alvarez’s Wiggins claim under every relevant standard, Alvarez’s
Wiggins claim fails.
Houston Crime Lab
Alvarez urges this court to stay and abate his federal habeas
proceedings—yet again—to reassert his habeas claims based on the Houston
Crime Lab’s deficient DNA processes in the late 1990s and consider updates
to DNA science. On this claim, however, there is no basis to abate for further
state court consideration. Alvarez raised these claims in both his 2010 and
2014 state habeas petitions. The TCCA found the claims procedurally
defaulted. Ex parte Alvarez, WR-No. 62,426-04, 2015 WL 1955072 (Tex.
Crim. App. April 29, 2015); Ex parte Alvarez, WR-No. 62,426-02, 2010 WL
3572246 (Tex. Crim. App. Sept. 15, 2010). The claims are barred from
federal court review, as the district court found. In the alternative, however,
we agree with the district court that these claims are meritless, in part
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because the tainted DNA tests in question were independently redone by
experts on behalf of Alvarez’s counsel and by court order, and those tests
showed conclusively that Alvarez’s Mossberg had Alvarez’s 16-year-old
victim’s blood on its barrel. Alvarez has not been able to overcome the
district court’s sound finding that there was no prosecutorial misconduct.
Moreover, even if there remained doubt about these forensics or about
alleged prosecutorial misconduct, abundant testimony as well as his own
admissions connected Alvarez to the crime, and he helped plan the shootings
and provided the car and weapons. In short, the evidence, if tainted, was not
material, as there is no reasonable probability that the result of the proceeding
would have been different had the evidence been excluded. See Banks v.
Dretke, 540 U.S. 668, 691, 124 S. Ct. 1256, 1272-73 (2004).
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s judgment denying
Alvarez’s habeas petition is AFFIRMED.
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Priscilla Richman, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
There is unrebutted evidence that Juan Carlos Alvarez’s lead counsel
at trial fell asleep, more than once, during direct examinations of witnesses
counsel then cross-examined in this capital murder trial. Accordingly,
(1) counsel’s performance was deficient, and (2) Alvarez was effectively
without counsel during those parts of the trial for reasons explained below. If
prejudice is required to be shown, that showing has been made. I part
company with the majority opinion, though I greatly respect and have the
highest regard for my colleagues.
One of the questions we must answer is what “Federal law, as
determined by the Supreme Court of the United States,” was “clearly
established” 1 when Alvarez was convicted in 1999.
First, Strickland was clearly established law. Prong one of Strickland’s
inquiry is whether “counsel’s representation fell below an objective standard
of reasonableness.” 2 No one contends that a lawyer’s conduct is reasonable
“under prevailing professional norms” 3 if he sleeps during the testimony of
a witness then cross-examines that witness in a capital trial. Strickland also
“requires showing that counsel . . . was not functioning as the ‘counsel’
guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment.” 4 Lead counsel’s
deficiencies were unreasonable under Strickland.
Second, the law was clearly established that if a defendant is deprived
of the presence and assistance of his attorney during a critical stage of the
1
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1).
2
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687-88 (1984).
3
Id. at 688 (“The proper measure of attorney performance remains simply
reasonableness under prevailing professional norms.”).
4
Id. at 687.
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prosecution, a violation of the Sixth Amendment can occur. 5 Such a violation
did occur in this case.
Assuming prejudice is not presumed under Cronic, 6 and must be
established under Strickland, “there is a reasonable probability that, but for
counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
different.” 7 “A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to
undermine confidence in the outcome.” 8
First, it is virtually impossible to reconstruct what cross-examination
by effective counsel would have elicited from witnesses at trial. As the
majority opinion recounts, defense counsels’ strategy focused on cross-
examining the State’s witnesses. 9 Lead counsel was responsible for cross-
examining the lion’s share of the State’s witnesses (16 of 27 during the guilt
phase of the trial, and 9 of 13 during the sentencing phase), 10 including eye
witnesses. 11 Sleeping during the direct testimony of witnesses whom counsel
is responsible for cross-examining undermines confidence in the outcome of
the trial.
Second, there is a reasonable probability sufficient to undermine
confidence that the jury would have imposed a death sentence. The spectacle
5
See, e.g., Geders v. United States, 425 U.S. 80, 91-92 (1976) (holding that when the
defendant could not consult counsel “during a 17-hour overnight recess between his direct-
and cross-examination,” “his right to the assistance of counsel guaranteed by the Sixth
Amendment” was impinged).
6
United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648 (1984).
7
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694.
8
Id.
9
See ante at 5.
10
See infra notes 95, 96, 104, 105 and accompanying text.
11
See infra note 97 and accompanying text.
31
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of lead counsel sleeping during a death penalty case evidenced a profound
lack of respect for the process and the gravity of the proceedings. There is a
reasonable probability that it reduced the proceedings in the eyes of the jury
to a pro forma exercise or a mere formality before Alvarez was sentenced to
die for what were unquestionably heinous crimes. It sent the message that
this defendant was so guilty, we do not have to ensure that his lawyer was
actually functioning as counsel at all times during trial.
Alvarez’s lead attorney fell asleep repeatedly, as two jurors have
attested without contradiction. The majority opinion relies heavily on the
fact that Alvarez was represented at trial by two lawyers. 12 But that analysis
is fundamentally flawed. Due to trial practice in Texas only one attorney is
responsible while a witness testifies, so co-counsel could not, and did not,
cross-examine witnesses for whom lead counsel was responsible and could
not and did not make objections during their direct testimony. 13 At a
minimum, when Alvarez’s lead attorney fell asleep during the direct
testimony of State witnesses whom lead counsel then cross-examined,
Alvarez did not have functioning counsel.
Nor can it be said that sleeping under such circumstances is a
permissible strategic decision. Alvarez’s Sixth Amendment right to
competent, effective counsel during a critical stage of the criminal
proceedings was violated.
12
See ante at 12.
13
See, e.g., Trial Guidelines for Attorneys, Dist. Cts. of Harris Cnty.,
https://www.justex.net/section/1493 [https://perma.cc/RES2-DH8D] (“When there is
co-counsel, only the attorney examining or cross-examining the witness will be allowed to
make objections.”); see also 19RR:137-38 (reflecting that the state trial court judge said,
“Well, I’ve always agreed that only one lawyer from each side has a right to make objections
and not double team.”). Citations to RR refer to the Reporter’s Record, which is the
transcript of the 1999 trial court proceedings. The digits preceding RR refer to the volume,
and the digits following RR reference the page numbers.
32
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The proceedings were also robbed of the gravity and the respect for
the integrity of the process that is required when a person’s life or liberty is
in the balance. As one juror put it, “There was at least one occasion where
the judge had to wake Mr. Reyes up by repeating his name when it was his
turn to question a witness; the courtroom broke out in laughter, but I would
say it was mostly nervous laughter at such a spectacle.” 14 Another juror’s
account was similar. 15
Allowing a death sentence to stand in these circumstances
undermines not only confidence in the integrity of the trial itself but the
public’s confidence in the judicial system as a whole. There is unrefuted
evidence that lead counsel “kept falling asleep,” “[t]his was not a one-time
occurrence,” “it happened repeatedly throughout the trial,” “[h]e would
definitely fall asleep, not just a head nod; he would be out,” “he would stay
out for periods of several minutes, as long as five minutes or maybe even more
on some occasions, two to three minutes or more on others,” lead counsel
“would do most of his dozing while the prosecutors were questioning their
witnesses,” 16 jurors were “shocked” by lead counsel “repeatedly falling
asleep during the trial” “on a number of occasions, when the State was
presenting its case and witnesses,” and the judge had to awaken lead counsel
“when it was his turn to question a witness.” 17 Sleeping episodes of these
durations during critical parts of the trial for which lead counsel was
responsible establish that counsel was not competent and was ineffective.
14
ROA.5414 ¶ 7.
15
See ROA.5409 ¶ 6 (“At some point I remember someone, maybe it was the judge,
had to call out his name a couple of times to wake him up when it was his turn to question
a witness after the State had presented their testimony, and the courtroom broke out in
laughter.”).
16
ROA.5409 ¶¶ 6-8.
17
ROA.5414 ¶ 7.
33
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Tellingly, in denying habeas relief, the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals (TCCA) did not expressly find or conclude that Alvarez’s trial
counsel was effective. To the contrary, the TCCA expressly declined to
adopt the state habeas trial court’s finding that Alvarez’s counsel was
effective. 18 Similarly, the TCCA expressly declined to adopt the state
habeas trial court’s conclusion of law that Alvarez had failed to show trial
counsel’s performance was deficient during the penalty phase. 19
Alvarez’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel was violated, and the
TCCA’s resolution of the sleeping-lawyer claim was unreasonable under 28
U.S.C. §§ 2254(d)(1) and (2). I would grant habeas relief.
I
In 1998, two gang-related shootings took place in the Houston, Texas
area eleven days apart. 20 Alvarez was indicted and charged with intentionally
and knowingly causing the death of three individuals during the incidents,
Juan Nevarez Favela, M. Aguirre, and J. Varela. 21 Until shortly before trial,
Alvarez was represented by appointed counsel, one of whom was John
18
See Ex parte Alvarez, No. WR-62,426-01, 2008 WL 4357801, at *1 (Tex. Crim.
App. Sep. 24, 2008) (not designated for publication) (“This Court has reviewed the record
with respect to the allegations made by Applicant. We adopt the trial court’s findings of
fact and conclusions of law, except for findings # 47 through # 73 and conclusions # 14
through # 19, which relate to arguments rather than new claims. Based upon the trial
court’s other findings and conclusions and our own review, we deny relief.”); ROA.5941-
46 (state habeas trial court’s findings of fact #47-73).
19
See Ex parte Alvarez, 2008 WL 4357801, at *1; ROA.5951-53 (state habeas trial
court’s conclusions of law #14-19).
20
17RR:19-20 (State’s guilt-phase opening statement); see also Alvarez v. Davis,
No. 4:09-CV-3040, 2017 WL 4844570, at *1 (S.D. Tex. Oct. 25, 2017) (unpublished);
ROA.3019.
21
17RR:19-20 (State’s guilt-phase opening statement); see also Alvarez, 2017 WL
4844570, at *1; ROA.3019 (same).
34
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Denninger, who was lead counsel as of mid-August 1999. 22 Shortly before
trial, Denninger’s co-counsel withdrew. 23 About two weeks before jury
selection began, and five weeks before the trial commenced in September
1999, Frumencio Reyes was retained as lead counsel. 24 Reyes had no prior
connection to the case. 25 Denninger continued as court-appointed second-
chair counsel. 26
The State prosecuted Alvarez under Texas’s law of parties, which
allows for conviction even if the defense could prove that Alvarez never fired
a shot. 27 At trial, the trial court stated that it was adhering to a well-
understood practice in Texas courts precluding co-counsel from cross-
examining jointly or participating jointly in objections when a witness
testifies. 28 The State’s evidence during the guilt phase consisted of
eyewitness testimony, ballistic evidence, and Alvarez’s own out-of-court
22
ROA.5208, 5218-19 (February 2008 supplemental reply detailing procedural
history).
23
See ROA.5218-19 (February 2008 supplemental reply); see also Alvarez, 2017 WL
4844570, at *3 & n.4; ROA.3022 & n.4 (same). Compare 3RR:5 (indicating co-counsel
Hards’s presence during pre-trial motion hearing), with 5RR:17 (state trial judge
introducing Reyes and Denninger as Alvarez’s counsel to prospective jurors).
24
ROA.5218-19 (February 2008 supplemental reply).
25
See ROA.5220 (February 2008 supplemental reply), 5375 (Affidavit of
Frumencio Reyes dated February 2008) (“I had only about five weeks to prepare between
the time when I was substituted as counsel and the first day of trial.”).
26
ROA.5219 (February 2008 supplemental reply), 5374 (Aff. of Frumencio Reyes
dated February 2008) (“After I joined the case, I kept [Denninger] on as second
counsel.”).
27
See 24RR:9 (State’s guilt-phase closing argument noting that “the controlling
law . . . is the law of parties . . . because this defendant did not fire the fatal shots”); see also
Alvarez, 2017 WL 4844570, at *3; ROA.3022-23 (same). See generally Tex. Penal
Code § 7.01.
28
See 19RR:137-38 (“Well, I’ve always agreed that only one lawyer from each side
has a right to make objections and not double team.”).
35
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statements. 29 Alvarez was found guilty of all four murders. 30 At the
punishment phase, the State put on witnesses to testify to Alvarez’s history
of violent criminal acts. 31 Alvarez was sentenced to death. 32 The TCCA
affirmed on direct appeal. 33
Alvarez sought state post-conviction relief and requested an
evidentiary hearing. 34 The sleeping-lawyer claim was asserted in this initial
state habeas proceeding, albeit in a concise passage of a supplemental reply
brief. 35 The claim was supported by affidavits from two jurors who saw lead
counsel repeatedly sleeping during trial, including during the direct
examination of witnesses whom lead counsel then cross-examined. 36 The
29
See, e.g., 17RR:19-26 (State’s guilt-phase opening statement); 24RR:7-21, 48-66
(State’s guilt-phase closing argument summarizing evidence); see also Alvarez, 2017 WL
4844570, at *3; ROA.3022 (same).
30
24RR:70 (jury verdict); see also Alvarez, 2017 WL 4844570, at *1; ROA.3019
(same).
31
28RR:40-62 (State’s penalty-phase closing argument summarizing evidence); see
also Alvarez, 2017 WL 4844570, at *3-4; ROA.3023-25 (same).
32
28RR:71 (sentence). For a more detailed discussion of the facts, see the district
court’s memorandum and order dated October 25, 2017, at Alvarez, 2017 WL 4844570, at
*1-4; ROA.3019-25.
33
Alvarez v. State, No. 73,648 slip op. (Tex. Crim. App. Oct. 30, 2002) (not
designated for publication); ROA.4415-55 (same).
34
ROA.4818-44 (first state application for post-conviction relief), 5190-93
(February 2008 Motion for Evidentiary Hearing), 5207 (February 2008 Motion Renewing
Request for an Evidentiary Hearing); see also Alvarez, 2017 WL 4844570, at *4 (detailing
procedural history); ROA.3025 (same).
35
ROA.5258 (February 2008 Reply in Support of Application for Writ of Habeas
Corpus and Motion Renewing Request for an Evidentiary Hearing to Resolve Controverted
Material Facts).
36
See ROA.5408-15.
36
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state habeas court denied relief without an evidentiary hearing. 37 On
September 24, 2008, the TCCA affirmed, but as already noted, it expressly
declined to adopt certain findings of fact and conclusions of law, including
the finding that trial counsel vigorously and effectively represented Alvarez
and the conclusion of law that Alvarez had been adequately represented by
counsel during the punishment phase. 38
Alvarez sought habeas relief in federal court, and on September 18,
2009, he filed his first petition, 39 which included his sleeping-lawyer claim. 40
Ultimately, the federal district court denied habeas relief in October 2017,
reasoning that since Alvarez had co-counsel, he was required to show “that
the times lead counsel was asleep left him without adequate representation,
and that counsel’s inaction in those moments harmed the defense.” 41 The
district court concluded that because second-chair counsel actively
participated in the trial and “Alvarez’s pleadings make no effort to allege
facts beyond that contained in the juror’s affidavit [sic], and he has not shown
the ability to do so, the state habeas court’s rejection of this claim was not
unreasonable.” 42 The district court decided Alvarez’s sleeping-lawyer claim
on the merits. It did not conclude that the sleeping-lawyer claim was
forfeited.
37
ROA.5931-54 (state habeas trial court’s findings of fact, conclusions of law, and
order).
38
Ex parte Alvarez, No. WR-62,426-01, 2008 WL 4357801, at *1 (Tex. Crim. App.
Sept. 24, 2008) (not designated for publication).
39
ROA.9-320; see also ROA.1746-2085 (amended petition dated April 4, 2011).
40
ROA.111-17; see also ROA.1889-94 (amended petition).
41
Alvarez v. Davis, No. 4:09-CV-3040, 2017 WL 4844570, at *32 (S.D. Tex. Oct.
25, 2017); ROA.3080 (same).
42
Alvarez, 2017 WL 4844570, at *32; ROA.3080 (same).
37
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Alvarez filed a notice of appeal and sought a certificate of
appealability. This court granted a certificate as to three issues: the claim
that Reyes slept during trial; the claim of ineffective assistance of trial counsel
regarding mitigating evidence; and the claim that the Harris County Crime
lab tainted DNA evidence. I consider only the sleeping-lawyer claim. I do
not, however, agree that Alvarez had effective counsel in the preparation and
presentation of mitigating evidence. 43 Because lead counsel’s performance
unquestionably was deficient and ineffective, I conclude it is unnecessary to
consider the Wiggins claim.
II
The majority opinion characterizes a sleeping lawyer claim as one in
which counsel is allegedly “defective,” concluding Strickland applies, as
distinguished from a claim of “deprivation” of counsel at a critical stage,
which at least potentially could be analyzed under Cronic. 44 I take issue with
the conclusion that Alvarez was not deprived of counsel when his lead lawyer
was sleeping. When counsel sleeps during the direct examination of a witness
whom that counsel then cross-examines, the defendant is deprived of
counsel. Counsel is also “defective” and ineffective. But the Sixth
Amendment requires presence of counsel during critical phases of a criminal
proceeding, and a sleeping lawyer cannot be present while slumbering.
Regardless, whether Strickland or Cronic is the correct frame for analysis,
Alvarez is entitled to relief.
I first consider the sleeping-lawyer claim under Strickland. Part II(A)
addresses how we determine what the clearly established law was and at what
level of generality law is clearly established. Part II(B) addresses whether
43
See ante at 28.
44
Ante at 18-20.
38
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prejudice must be shown. Part II(C) considers what the trial court record
reflects regarding the sleeping lawyer’s participation during the trial. Part
II(D) concludes that even if the Strickland paradigm applies, this court
should grant habeas relief. Part II(E) discusses the majority opinion’s
analysis of pertinent decisions.
I then consider the application of Cronic in Part III. Part IV concludes
that if habeas relief is warranted under Cronic, application of Cronic would
not violate Teague v. Lane. 45 Part V discusses whether the sleeping-lawyer
claim was adjudicated by the state court on the merits as a procedural matter.
Finally, Part VI concludes that in the alternative to granting habeas relief, this
court should grant Alvarez’ motion to hold the appeal in abeyance.
A
AEDPA provides that a federal court cannot grant habeas relief on
“any claim that was adjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings
unless the adjudication of the claim”:
(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an
unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as
determined by the Supreme Court of the United States; or
(2) resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable
determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in
the State court proceeding. 46
As a threshold matter, how do we determine what is “clearly established
Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States”?
45
489 U.S. 288 (1989).
46
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).
39
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The majority opinion is not clear as to what it considers to be the
clearly established law in 1999, 47 when Alvarez was convicted, regarding
(1) whether lead trial counsel’s performance was ineffective under
Strickland, and (2) showing prejudice under Strickland. The majority
opinion seems to ground its resolution as to both of these prongs on the basis
that Alvarez had two lawyers at trial. During its discussion of “the
intersection of Cronic and Strickland,” the majority opinion says, “Nor has
the [Supreme] Court confronted a case where one co-counsel allegedly slept
during parts of the trial, while the other co-counsel fully participated in the
trial as well.” 48 To the extent that the majority opinion concludes that the
law was not clearly established that if a defendant has two lawyers, deficient
conduct by one lawyer can prejudice the defendant, I disagree.
As will be discussed in more detail below, the law was clearly
established in 1999 that “when a defendant is deprived of the presence and
assistance of his attorney, either throughout the prosecution or during a
critical stage in, at least, the prosecution of a capital case,” 49 the Sixth
Amendment is violated. 50 It was also clearly established in 1999 that if the
requisite degree of prejudice is shown, at the very least, reversal is required
under Strickland. 51
47
Ante at 11-12.
48
Ante at 20.
49
Holloway v. Arkansas, 435 U.S. 475, 489 (1978) (citing Gideon v. Wainwright, 372
U.S. 335 (1963)).
50
See id.; see also Geders v. United States, 425 U.S. 80, 91-92 (1976).
51
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984) (stating that a “convicted
defendant’s claim that counsel’s assistance was so defective as to require reversal of a
conviction or death sentence has two components,” one of which is that “the defendant
must show that the deficient performance prejudiced the defense”).
40
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The Supreme Court recently reminded us in Andrew v. White 52 that
“[g]eneral legal principles can constitute clearly established law for purposes
of AEDPA so long as they are holdings of [the Supreme] Court.” 53 Indeed,
“certain principles are fundamental enough that when new factual
permutations arise, the necessity to apply the earlier rule will be beyond
doubt.” 54 “AEDPA does not ‘require state and federal courts to wait for
some nearly identical factual pattern before a legal rule must be applied.’” 55
A careful examination of Andrew v. White is illuminating and
instructive. Andrew, a woman, had been sentenced to death in state court
for conspiring with her lover to kill her estranged husband. 56 The prosecutor
presented a considerable amount of evidence about her sex life, affairs she
had in college, her thong underclothing, whether she was a good mother, and
how she dressed in public, most of which the State had conceded on appeal
was irrelevant. 57 The Supreme Court held that “By the time of Andrew’s
trial, this Court had made clear that when ʻevidence is introduced that is so
unduly prejudicial that it renders the trial fundamentally unfair, the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment provides a mechanism for
relief.’” 58 The decision the Supreme Court cited for that holding, in the
52
604 U.S. 86 (2025).
53
Id. at 94.
54
Id. at 95 (quoting White v. Woodall, 572 U.S. 415, 427 (2014)).
55
Panetti v. Quarterman, 551 U.S. 930, 953 (2007) (quoting Carey v. Musladin, 549
U.S. 70, 81 (2006) (Kennedy, J., concurring in judgment)).
56
Andrew, 604 U.S. at 88.
57
Id. at 88-90.
58
Id. at 88 (quoting Payne v. Tennessee, 501 U.S. 808, 825 (1991)).
41
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opening paragraph of its opinion, was Payne v. Tennessee. 59 Yet, the Payne
case was not factually similar to Andrew.
The main issue in Payne was whether “the Eighth Amendment bars
the admission of victim impact evidence during the penalty phase of a capital
trial.” 60 In holding the answer was “no,” and overruling prior precedent,
the Court said “In the event that evidence is introduced that is so unduly
prejudicial that it renders the trial fundamentally unfair, the Due Process
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment provides a mechanism for relief.” 61
The Supreme Court held in Andrew that this statement was a “holding[], as
opposed to the dicta,” for purposes of determining clearly established law
under AEDPA. 62
In Andrew, the Court reasoned that the statement in Payne was a
“holding” because “the Court removed one protection for capital
defendants (the per se bar on victim impact statements) in part because
another protection (the Due Process Clause) remained available against
evidence that is so unduly prejudicial that it renders the trial fundamentally
unfair.” 63 “The legal principle on which Andrew[, the condemned
defendant,] relies, that the Due Process Clause can in certain cases protect
against the introduction of unduly prejudicial evidence at a criminal trial, was
59
Id. (citing Payne, 501 U.S. at 808 ).
60
Payne, 501 U.S. at 811; see id. (“In this case we reconsider our holdings in Booth
v. Maryland, 482 U.S. 496 (1987), and South Carolina v. Gathers, 490 U.S. 805 (1989), that
the Eighth Amendment bars the admission of victim impact evidence during the penalty
phase of a capital trial.”); see also Andrew, 604 U.S. at 81 (“In Payne, this Court considered
whether to overrule a set of prior cases that had categorically barred the introduction of
victim impact evidence during the sentencing phases of a capital trial.”).
61
Payne, 501 U.S. at 825 (citing Darden v. Wainwright, 477 U.S. 168, 179-183
(1986)).
62
See Andrew, 604 U.S. at 92 (quoting White v. Woodall, 572 U.S. 415, 419 (2014)).
63
Id. at 93 (emphasis omitted).
42
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therefore indispensable to the decision in Payne. That means it was a holding
of this Court for purposes of AEDPA.” 64
The Supreme Court further opined that “Payne did not invent due
process protections against unduly prejudicial evidence.” 65 The Court cited
three other cases for the proposition that it “had several times before held
that prosecutors’ prejudicial or misleading statements violate due process if
they render a trial or capital sentencing fundamentally unfair.” 66 Of those
three decisions, two held there was no Due Process violation. 67 So holdings
failing to find a constitutional violation can clearly establish law just as
decisions finding a violation can.
The Court cited a fourth decision, 68 Kansas v. Carr, 69 to support its
statement in Andrew that “the Court relied on Payne in the same way that
Andrew[, the defendant,] sought to rely on it here: for the proposition that
‘the Due Process Clause . . . wards off the introduction of unduly prejudicial
evidence that would render the trial fundamentally unfair.’” 70 In Carr, the
64
Id.
65
Id.
66
Id. (citing Donnelly v. DeChristoforo, 416 U.S. 637 (1974); Caldwell v. Mississippi,
472 U.S. 320, 338-40 (1985); Darden v. Wainwright, 477 U.S. 168, 178–83 (1986)).
67
See Donnelly, 416 U.S. at 639 (holding a prosecutor’s remarks during closing
arguments were not sufficiently prejudicial to violate the respondent’s due process rights);
Darden, 477 U.S. at 181(holding counsel’s comments during closing arguments did not
deprive petitioner of a fair trial). But see Caldwell, 472 U.S. at 323 (vacating a death
sentence because due process was violated when a “prosecutor urged the jury not to view
itself as determining whether the defendant would die because a death sentence would be
reviewed for correctness by the State Supreme Court”).
68
Andrew, 604 U.S. at 94.
69
577 U.S. 108 (2016).
70
Andrew, 604 U.S. at 94 (alteration in original) (quoting Kansas v. Carr, 577 U.S.
108, 123 (2016)).
43
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Court rejected a due process challenge and upheld a death sentence even
though in a joint sentencing proceeding, one defendant’s mitigating evidence
“put a thumb on death’s scale for the other.” 71 Then, the Supreme Court
proceeded to cite two additional decisions in Andrew for the proposition that
“This Court has also relied on the underlying fundamental fairness principle
in the jury-impartiality context.” 72
Importantly, neither Payne nor any of the other decisions cited by the
Supreme Court in Andrew dealt with the introduction of evidence of a
defendant’s sexual activity or the other types of evidence at issue in Andrew,
and only one of those decisions dealt with an admission of evidence issue. To
reiterate, the Supreme Court held in Andrew that “To the extent that the
Court of Appeals thought itself constrained by AEDPA to limit Payne to its
facts, it was mistaken. General legal principles can constitute clearly
established law for purposes of AEDPA so long as they are holdings of this
Court.” 73
The majority opinion dismisses Andrew v. White—saying “The
‘holding,’ [apparently referring to Payne, citing 145 S. Ct. at 81] in turn, was
directly related to the evidentiary issue presented to the courts.” 74 But as
already discussed, Payne made only the general statement: “In the event that
evidence is introduced that is so unduly prejudicial that it renders the trial
fundamentally unfair, the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
71
Carr, 577 U.S. at 122.
72
Andrew, 604 U.S. at 94 (citing Skilling v. United States, 561 U.S. 358, 384-85
(2010) (holding that the district court did not err in declining to change venue in spite of
publicity about the case); Rideau v. Louisiana, 373 U.S. 723, 726 (1963) (holding that due
process was violated when the district court denied a change of venue motion in light of a
video of the defendant’s confession that was widely viewed on television)).
73
Id.
74
Ante at 12.
44
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provides a mechanism for relief.” 75 The majority opinion concludes its
dismissal of Andrew, by saying it “is inapposite on the facts and the precise
legal issue before the Court.” 76
However, Andrew addressed more than a particular set of facts or a
precise legal issue—there, the prejudicial impact on the defendant’s due
process right of voluminous evidence about her sex life. Andrew also
addressed federal courts’ duty to identify and apply well-established
principles of law in the AEDPA context. One such well-established principle
of law is that a Sixth Amendment violation can occur if a defendant is
deprived of the presence and assistance of his attorney during a critical stage
of the prosecution. 77 Such a principle is no more general than the Supreme
Court’s holding “that the Due Process Clause can in certain cases protect
against the introduction of unduly prejudicial evidence at a criminal trial,”
which the Andrew court observed was clearly-established law for purposes of
AEDPA. 78 To the extent the majority opinion contends that the law must be
clearly established that deficiencies of one of two counsel can constitute
ineffective assistance of counsel, even if co-counsel at trial was not deficient
as to the parts of the trial he conducted, it fails to heed Andrew. 79
75
Payne v. Tennessee, 501 U.S. 808, 825 (1991).
76
Ante at 12.
77
See, e.g., Geders v. United States, 425 U.S. 80, 91-92 (1976) (holding that a
defendant’s inability to consult his counsel “during a 17-hour overnight recess between his
direct-and cross-examination impinged upon his right to the assistance of counsel
guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment”).
78
Andrew, 604 U.S. at 93; cf. id. at 94-95 (observing that the Eighth Amendment
principle that a sentence may not be “grossly disproportionate” to the offense is clearly
established law for AEDPA purposes).
79
See id. at 94 (“To the extent that the Court of Appeals thought itself constrained
by AEDPA to limit Payne to its facts, it was mistaken.”).
45
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Nor can we forget that Strickland was well-established law. Its
holdings sufficiently established the guideposts for when counsel’s
performance is deficient.
B
The right to counsel at a critical stage of a criminal proceeding was
established long before Alvarez was convicted in 1999. 80 The Strickland
decision itself said that “In a long line of cases that includes Powell v.
Alabama,[81] Johnson v. Zerbst,[82] and Gideon v. Wainwright,[83] this Court has
recognized that the Sixth Amendment right to counsel exists, and is needed,
in order to protect the fundamental right to a fair trial.” 84
The Supreme Court had held in Holloway v. Arkansas 85 by the time of
Alvarez’s trial in 1999, and at the time the TCCA denied Alvarez’s sleeping-
lawyer claim in September of 2008, that, as quoted earlier, “when a
defendant is deprived of the presence and assistance of his attorney, either
throughout the prosecution or during a critical stage in, at least, the
prosecution of a capital offense,” 86 a violation of the Sixth Amendment can
80
See White v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 59, 60 (1963) (reversing petitioner’s death
sentence, holding “[w]hatever may be the normal function of the ‘preliminary hearing’
under Maryland law, it was in this case . . . ‘critical’” because a guilty “plea was taken at a
time when he had no counsel”); Hamilton v. Alabama, 368 U.S. 52, 54-55 (1961) (reversing
a death sentence because, though the defendant entered a plea of not guilty at arraignment,
that was a critical stage under Alabama law and he did not have counsel).
81
287 U.S. 45 (1932).
82
304 U.S. 458 (1938).
83
372 U.S. 335 (1963).
84
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 684 (1984) (internal citations omitted).
85
435 U.S. 475 (1978).
86
Id. at 489 (citing Gideon, 372 U.S. at 335); see infra note 150.
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occur. 87 Those principles lead to the conclusion that the TCCA’s decision
was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly
established federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United
States.
The clear statement in Holloway cannot be dismissed. The Court said
that “when a defendant is deprived of the presence and assistance of his
attorney, either throughout the prosecution or during a critical stage in, at
least, the prosecution of a capital offense, reversal is automatic.” 88 Even if
subsequent decisions of the Supreme Court indicate that reversal is not
automatic, those decisions did not remotely change the proposition that
“when a defendant is deprived of the presence and assistance of his attorney,
either throughout the prosecution or during a critical stage in, at least, the
prosecution of a capital offense,” a violation of the Sixth Amendment can
occur. When Alvarez’s lead counsel slept during the direct testimony of
witnesses he then cross-examined, Alvarez was deprived of the presence and
assistance of his attorney.
Regardless, Alvarez has established that lead counsel’s performance
was deficient under Strickland. Lead counsel’s “representation fell below an
objective standard of reasonableness.” 89 No one contends that it is
reasonable “under prevailing professional norms” 90 to sleep during
witnesses’ testimony, and then cross-examine those witnesses. To the extent
that the TCCA concluded lead counsel’s sleeping was not unreasonable
conduct, that conclusion was “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable
87
See Holloway, 435 U.S. at 489.
88
Id. (emphasis added).
89
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688; see also Holloway, 435 U.S. at 489.
90
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688 (“The proper measure of attorney performance
remains simply reasonableness under prevailing professional norms.”).
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application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme
Court of the United States.” Strickland also “requires showing that
counsel . . . was not functioning as the ‘counsel’ guaranteed the defendant by
the Sixth Amendment.” 91 Sleeping counsel cannot function as counsel while
asleep.
C
Additionally, Alvarez has shown prejudice under Strickland. He has
shown “that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
different.” 92 “A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to
undermine confidence in the outcome.” 93 The fundamental premise of
Strickland must also be borne in mind. “The benchmark for judging any
claim of ineffectiveness must be whether counsel’s conduct so undermined
the proper functioning of the adversarial process that the trial cannot be
relied on as having produced a just result.” 94
The witnesses that lead counsel cross-examined at trial and their
importance is a matter of record. Lead counsel provided substantially and
materially more of the representation at trial than did his co-counsel. During
the guilt phase, the State called twenty-seven witnesses. 95 Reyes, who was
lead counsel and the sleeping lawyer, cross-examined at least sixteen of
them. 96 Of those sixteen witnesses, at least six were bystanders who provided
91
Id. at 687.
92
Id. at 694.
93
Id.
94
Id. at 686.
95
See 1RR:22-25 (chronological index of reporter’s record listing witnesses).
96
See 17RR:48-60 (Lauritzen cross by Reyes); 17RR:91-106 (Ayala cross by Reyes);
17RR:112-27 (Nava cross by Reyes); 17RR:139-41 (Gonzales cross by Reyes); 18RR:89-110
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eyewitness accounts of the murders. 97 One in particular, Brandy Varela,
testified to being only a few feet away when a man with a shotgun approached
and killed her boyfriend and brother. 98 At trial, Varela identified Alvarez as
the shooter. 99 The State also called Miguel Reyes, a member of the
Southwest Cholos, who testified to being in the car with Alvarez during the
Woodfair drive-by shooting. 100 Many of the remaining witnesses the sleeping
lawyer cross-examined were police officers who investigated the murders and
examined the crime scenes. 101 One of these officers, Sergeant George
Alderete, testified to recording Alvarez’s confession regarding the Woodfair
murders. 102
During the guilt phase, the defense called four witnesses, three of
whom were presented by Reyes. 103
(Carr cross by Reyes); 18RR:167-87 (Brandy Varela cross by Reyes); 19RR:73-90 (Farrel
cross by Reyes); 20RR:14-63, 111-38 (Reyes cross by Reyes); 20RR:189-201 (Riddle cross
by Reyes); 21RR:65-121 (Alderete cross by Reyes); 21RR:189-212 (Suro cross by Reyes);
22RR:33-73 (Kreuzer-Halling cross by Reyes); 22RR:133-38 (Ogden cross by Reyes);
22RR:142-45 (Burrell voir dire examination by Reyes); 22RR:186-96 (Narula cross by
Reyes); 22RR:213 (Aguirre cross by Reyes).
97
See 17RR:27-31 (Lauritzen); 17RR:70 (Ayala); 17RR:108-09 (Nava); 17RR:129-
31 (Gonzales); 18RR:145-48 (Brandy Varela); 19RR:51-52 (Farrel).
98
18RR:131-67 (Varela direct examination).
99
18RR:157-58.
100
See 19RR:182-95.
101
See 18RR:44 (Carr); 20RR:169 (Riddle); 16RR:8-9 (Alderete); 21RR:179 (Suro);
22RR:22 (Kreuzer-Halling); 22RR:127-28 (Ogden); 22RR:139-40 (Burrell).
102
21RR:59-60.
103
23RR:54-67 (Teresa Alvarez direct by Reyes); 23RR:81-82 (Brandy Varela
direct by Reyes); 23RR:83-96 (Patricia Alvarez direct by Reyes).
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During the sentencing phase, the State called thirteen witnesses. 104
Reyes, the sleeping lawyer, cross-examined nine (all but four) of those
witnesses, 105 and the defense declined to question one of the witnesses
altogether. 106 Several of the State’s witnesses whom Reyes cross-examined
testified to witnessing Alvarez commit acts of violence as well as to being
victimized by a man who matched Alvarez’s description and who was riding
in a car similar to one witnesses to the drive-by shootings described. 107 For
instance, Thomas Carreon, Jr., a member of a rival gang, was playing
basketball with children when he was robbed at gunpoint by someone riding
in a red, four-door car. 108 Carreon identified Alvarez as the robber. 109 Alpidio
Torres, a witness to a drive-by shooting that occurred on May 31, 1998, 110
corroborated his previous identification of Alvarez from a photospread by
identifying Alvarez in the courtroom. 111 Along with these victims, the State
also called police officers who investigated the shootings (who were also
104
See 1RR:26-28 (chronological index of reporter’s record listing witnesses).
105
25RR:50-68 (Favela cross by Reyes); 25RR:118-28 (Termeulen cross by Reyes);
25RR:149-66 (Bear cross by Reyes); 25RR:188-200 (Espinoza cross by Reyes); 26RR:11-13
(Baldwin cross by Reyes); 26RR:25-36 (Torres cross by Reyes); 26RR:54-59 (Carreon cross
by Reyes); 26RR:114-20 (Hazelwood cross by Reyes); 26RR:140-43 (Anglei cross by
Reyes).
106
See 26RR:150 (Reyes declining to question Sandra Varela).
107
See 25RR:32-49 (Favela); 25RR:130-149 (Bear); 25RR:177-88 (Espinoza);
26RR:13-24 (Torres); 26RR:40-43 (Carreon); 26RR:100-09 (Hazelwood).
108
26RR:42-50.
109
26RR:43.
110
26RR:14, 18-20.
111
26RR:23-24.
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cross-examined by Reyes). 112 One of these officers described Carreon’s
identification of Alvarez from a photospread. 113
During the sentencing phase, the defense called eight witnesses, seven
of whom were presented by Reyes. 114
There is uncontroverted evidence from a juror that Reyes “would do
most of his dozing while the prosecutors were questioning their
witnesses.” 115 Reyes could not effectively cross-examine State witnesses
during whose testimony he slept because he could not know what their direct
examination elicited while he was asleep. Yet “[c]ross-examination is the
principal means by which the believability of a witness and the truth of his
testimony are tested.” 116 It “is an essential and fundamental requirement for
the kind of fair trial which is this country’s constitutional goal.” 117 Nor could
Reyes assess and advise Alvarez about the parts of testimony Reyes did not
hear because he was not awake.
There was prejudice aside from how Reyes might have better
performed his role as counsel had he not missed parts of the trial while asleep.
The fact that he slept when he did severely undermines the confidence that
Alvarez received a fair trial. The prejudice from the jarring vision of a
112
25RR:98-108 (Termeulen); 26RR:5-11 (Baldwin); 26RR:134-35 (Anglei); see also
supra notes 96, 105 (cross-examinations).
113
See 26RR:134-37.
114
1RR:26, 28-29; 27RR:25, 72, 83, 91, 125, 188, 192; 28RR:5. Anthony Thomas
was the only defense witness at sentencing not questioned by Reyes. 27RR:5, 22.
115
ROA.5409 ¶ 8.
116
Davis v. Alaska, 415 U.S. 308, 316 (1974); see Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S.
36, 62 (2004) (“[A]dversarial testing ‘beats and bolts out the Truth much better.’”
(quoting Matthew Hale, History and Analysis of the Common Law of
England 258 (1713))).
117
Pointer v. Texas, 380 U.S. 400, 405 (1965).
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sleeping lawyer in the midst of a death penalty trial was apparent, even to a
lay person. One juror perceptively identified the fair trial issues: “I don’t see
how Mr. Reyes could have done a very good job of questioning those
witnesses when he would be sleeping during their testimony.” 118 His
sleeping also powerfully reinforced that juror’s conclusion that Reyes “did
not seem very invested or involved in the case or his client.” 119 The juror
additionally stated: “I never noticed him interacting with his client
throughout the trial. He did not seem to care much for his client or what was
happening during the trial.” 120 That juror further recounted:
Mr. Reyes’s lack of interest in general, and his repeated
sleeping during the trial, were something we jurors talked about
when we were deliberating. When we talked about it, we were
concerned about how bad it seemed that here you had a young
man, a boy really, whose whole life was in front of him, indeed
whose life was literally at stake in this trial, and his lawyer
didn’t even care enough to stay awake or aggressively fight for
him. 121
The other juror who gave an affidavit similarly said: “Mr. Alvarez’s
lawyers did not seem prepared, nor did they seem all that concerned about
the case.” 122 That juror recounted how “shocked” the jurors were when
Reyes “repeatedly” fell asleep during trial, and that at least once the judge
“had to wake Mr. Reyes up by repeating his name when it was his turn to
118
ROA.5409 ¶ 8.
119
ROA.5408 ¶ 5; see also ROA.5413 ¶ 5 (a different juror stating in an affidavit that
“On the defense side, however, all I can say is that the defense did not seem to be motivated
to put up any real effort for Mr. Alvarez”).
120
ROA.5408-09 ¶ 5.
121
ROA.5409-10 ¶ 9.
122
ROA.5414 ¶ 6.
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question a witness,” which caused the courtroom to break out into “nervous
laughter at such a spectacle.” 123 The juror then said:
When we got back in the jury room the jurors talked about how
we couldn’t believe that a lawyer like this in a capital case was
falling asleep during the trial. It bothered us, and we
commented on it to one another, and it fit with our overall
impression that the defense did not really do much of a job of
defending their client. 124
In these circumstances, Reyes’s repeated sleeping during trial
“undermine[s] confidence in the outcome” of Alvarez’s capital trial.125
The State argues, apparently for the first time in this court, that we
should not rely on these juror affidavits because Rule 606(b) of both the
123
ROA.5414 ¶ 7.
124
ROA.5414 ¶ 8.
125
Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 694 (1984).
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Federal and Texas Rules of Evidence 126 prohibit considering them. 127 As
noted above, Alvarez offered these affidavits in connection with his first state
126
Federal Rule of Evidence 606(b) provides:
(b) During an Inquiry into the Validity of a Verdict or Indictment.
(1) Prohibited Testimony or Other Evidence. During an inquiry
into the validity of a verdict or indictment, a juror may not testify
about any statement made or incident that occurred during the
jury’s deliberations; the effect of anything on that juror’s or
another juror’s vote; or any juror’s mental processes concerning
the verdict or indictment. The court may not receive a juror’s
affidavit or evidence of a juror’s statement on these matters.
(2) Exceptions. A juror may testify about whether:
(A) extraneous prejudicial information was improperly
brought to the jury’s attention;
(B) an outside influence was improperly brought to bear
on any juror; or
(C) a mistake was made in entering the verdict on the
verdict form.
Texas Rule of Evidence 606(b) is similar, with slightly different exceptions:
(b) During an Inquiry into the Validity of a Verdict or Indictment.
(1) Prohibited Testimony or Other Evidence. During an inquiry
into the validity of a verdict or indictment, a juror may not testify
about any statement made or incident that occurred during the
jury’s deliberations; the effect of anything on that juror’s or
another juror’s vote; or any juror’s mental processes concerning
the verdict or indictment. The court may not receive a juror’s
affidavit or evidence of a juror’s statement on these matters.
(2) Exceptions. A juror may testify:
(A) about whether an outside influence was improperly
brought to bear on any juror; or
(B) to rebut a claim that the juror was not qualified to
serve.
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postconviction proceeding. 128 He again attached the affidavits to his federal
habeas petition. 129 The district court relied on them. 130 Yet the State has not
pointed to a single instance in the record of its objection to these
affidavits 131—not in any of the state proceedings, and not in the district
court. 132
In any event, the affidavits were offered as evidence of what happened
in open court to establish that Reyes slept during trial. The affidavits were
not offered to show how or why the jurors voted as they did. They are
nevertheless evidence of what, from an objective standpoint, occurred in the
courtroom. The affidavits are evidence that a death penalty trial punctuated
with lead counsel repeatedly sleeping severely impairs the public perception
of the fairness and integrity of the justice system.
Reyes was seen sleeping many times by jurors, for up to five minutes
at a time and perhaps longer, during the presentation of the State’s case
against Alvarez. 133 The impact on jurors of seeing Alvarez’s primary counsel
127
ECF 40 at 24 (State Resp. in Opp’n to Appeal for Certificate of Appealability);
ECF 57 at 14 n.10 (State Resp. in Opp’n to Mot. to Expand the R.); ECF 85 at 7 (State
Suppl. Merits Br.) (quoting Young v. Davis, 835 F.3d 520, 529 (5th Cir. 2016)).
128
ROA.5263-65, 5408-15.
129
ROA.9-12, 321, 443-49.
130
Alvarez v. Davis, No. 4:09-CV-3040, 2017 WL 4844570, at *32 (S.D. Tex. Oct.
25, 2017); ROA.3079 (same).
131
See ECF 40 at 24 n.19 (State Resp. in Opp’n to Appeal for Certificate of
Appealability) (suggesting that the State made no similar objection in the district court by
explaining that the State argued in the district court that the sleeping-lawyer claim was
unexhausted and procedurally defaulted).
132
See ROA.2174-75 (Answer to Am. Pet.) (discussing the juror affidavits in district
court proceedings without objecting to their inclusion).
133
ROA.5409 ¶¶ 7-8 (“During the times I saw Mr. Reyes sleeping, he would stay
out for periods of several minutes, as long as five minutes or maybe even more on some
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asleep while weighty and damning testimony was adduced, and the trial
court’s failure to take any action, is truly incalculable, particularly with
respect to the sentence Alvarez was to receive. The unmistakable message
to jurors was that the legal system thought it unimportant that Alvarez have
competent counsel when deciding whether he was guilty and, literally,
whether he was to live or die.
D
The TCCA’s decision regarding the sleeping-lawyer claim also
“resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of
the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.” 134
There was no evidentiary hearing in the state habeas proceedings. The State
had the opportunity to, but did not, present evidence from other witnesses
who were present during the trial. Nor did it claim that there were no other
witnesses available due to the passage of time between the trial in 1999 and
the initial habeas proceedings in 2008. The evidence in the affidavits from
jurors was uncontradicted.
The judge who presided over the trial that resulted in Alvarez’s
conviction in 1999 was Judge Larry Fuller. He did not preside over the state
habeas proceedings. The presiding judge in the state habeas trial court
proceedings was Judge Hazel Jones. So, the habeas trial court judge did not
have actual knowledge of what occurred at the original trial.
occasions, two to three minutes or more on others. . . . As best I can recall Mr. Reyes would
do most of his dozing while the prosecutors were questioning their witnesses.”).
134
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2).
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The TCCA expressly declined to adopt the state habeas trial court’s
findings regarding counsel’s effectiveness at trial. 135 The TCCA expressly
refused to adopt the following finding by the state habeas trial court:
50. The Court finds, based on the record, that counsel
filed numerous pre-trial motions, including a motion to
suppress the applicant’s statements, conducted pre-trial
hearings, had a thorough command of the facts of the offense
and relevant law, vigorously cross-examined witnesses,
presented witnesses in defense of the applicant at guilt-
innocence and punishment, retained an expert witness, made
relevant objections throughout the trial, argued passionately
for the applicant at both guilt-innocence and punishment, and
presented the obvious, reasonable trial strategy of focusing on
the punishment phase given the overwhelming amount of
evidence implicating the applicant in the instant capital
murder. 136
Sleeping during direct examination of critical witnesses’ testimony
before cross-examining them is ineffective assistance of counsel that amounts
to no counsel at all. Reyes cross-examined twenty-five of the State’s
witnesses, which is a substantial majority of the witnesses called by the State.
We know that he did “most of” his sleeping during the State’s direct
examination of witnesses, and that “[h]e would definitely fall asleep, not just
a head nod,” and “would stay out for periods of several minutes, as long as
five minutes or maybe even more on some occasions, two to three minutes or
more on others.” 137
135
See Ex parte Alvarez, No. WR-62,426-01, 2008 WL 4357801, at *1 (Tex. Crim.
App. Sep. 24, 2008) (not designated for publication).
136
ROA.5941; see Ex parte Alvarez, 2008 WL 4357801, at *1.
137
ROA.5409 ¶¶ 6-8.
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In the face of unrebutted testimony that Reyes slept for substantial
periods of time during critical trial proceedings, and in light of the TCCA’s
rejection of the trial court’s finding as to counsel’s effectiveness as described
above, it is difficult to hypothesize what facts the TCCA could have found
that would render denial of the sleeping-lawyer claim reasonable.
E
The majority opinion asserts that this case presents a “novel” issue
because Alvarez had two lawyers, only one of whom slept. 138 The
unconsciousness of one, as the reasoning goes, can be eclipsed by the
effectiveness of the other.
I disagree. “[T]he adversarial process protected by the Sixth
Amendment requires that the accused have ‘counsel acting in the role of an
advocate.’” 139 “Unconscious counsel equates to no counsel at all.
Unconscious counsel does not analyze, object, listen or in any way exercise
judgment on behalf of a client.” 140 “[I]f the process loses its character as a
confrontation between adversaries, the constitutional guarantee is
violated.” 141 The repeated, continuing spectacle of sleeping counsel
138
See ante at 20-21; see also McFarland v. Lumpkin, 26 F.4th 314, 320 (5th Cir.
2022) (“We are aware of no case where a sleeping co-counsel alone triggers Cronic’s
presumption of prejudice. McFarland cannot show that his counsel failed to function in
any meaningful sense because, at every stage of trial, he also enjoyed effective assistance by
Melamed. As such, the TCCA’s decision is not contrary to or an unreasonable application
of clearly established Supreme Court precedent. The district court properly denied habeas
relief as to McFarland’s Cronic claim.”); Hall v. Thaler, 504 F. App’x 269, 270, 277 (5th
Cir. 2012) (noting that a “presumption [of prejudice] applies where the defendant is
completely denied assistance of counsel” and denying a certificate of appealability on a
sleeping-lawyer claim because Hall was represented by two attorneys).
139
United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 656 (1984) (quoting Anders v. California,
386 U.S. 738, 743 (1967)).
140
Burdine v. Johnson, 262 F.3d 336, 349 (5th Cir. 2001) (en banc).
141
Cronic, 466 U.S. at 656-57.
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undermined that character of confrontation. In at least one instance Reyes
was roused from his slumber when the judge called out his name, as
witnessed by the jurors.
To reiterate, I do not contend that a few instances of napping by
counsel during trial violate the Sixth Amendment right to counsel. But
Alvarez was without counsel during critical parts of the trial. Reyes was
indisputably the lead counsel. 142 As discussed above, the state trial court
adhered to a general practice in Texas state courts that when one lawyer has
responsibility for a witness during a trial, co-counsel cannot interject
objections or take over or supplement cross-examination. 143 The fact that co-
counsel sat next to Reyes while Reyes snoozed during direct examination of
critical witnesses called by the State to testify against Alvarez does nothing
to repair or offset or undo the ineffectiveness that occurred while lead
counsel slept. During these times, Alvarez suffered “the ‘complete denial of
counsel’” 144—not merely the denial “of part of the defense team.” 145
This is not a “novel factual context” like the physical absence of the
lawyer in Van Patten who participated in proceedings via speakerphone. 146
Lead counsel’s trial conduct in the case before us can be evaluated under
Strickland’s long-standing construct. 147
The fact that co-counsel performed adequately while questioning the
witnesses for which he had responsibility does not erase either lead counsel’s
142
ROA.5220 (February 2008 supplemental reply).
143
See, e.g., 19RR:137-38.
144
Bell v. Cone, 535 U.S. 685, 695 (2002) (quoting Cronic, 466 U.S. at 659).
145
Ante at 20 n.12.
146
Wright v. Van Patten, 552 U.S. 120, 125 (2008).
147
See Andrew v. White, 604 U.S. 86, 94 (2025).
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deficient performance or the impact that deficient performance had on the
outcome of the trial. Co-counsel’s performance could not erase the spectacle
of lead counsel sleeping during the presentation of State witnesses lead
counsel then cross-examined.
III
I come to the question of whether Cronic applies such that prejudice
is presumed. In light of the Supreme Court’s decision in Wright v. Van
Patten, 148 the majority opinion mounts an argument that a presumption of
prejudice does not apply in the present case. I begin with some of the history
regarding a presumption of prejudice when counsel has been deficient or
absent.
In 1978, the Supreme Court said in Holloway v. Arkansas 149 that “when
a defendant is deprived of the presence and assistance of his attorney, either
throughout the prosecution or during a critical stage in, at least, the
prosecution of a capital offense, reversal is automatic.” 150 In Holloway, the
trial court “improperly require[d] joint representation over timely
objection.” 151 The Supreme Court reversed and remanded, declining to
impose a showing of prejudice or harm. 152 The Supreme Court concluded
that “ʻ[t]he right to have the assistance of counsel is too fundamental and
absolute to allow courts to indulge in nice calculations as to the amount of
prejudice arising from its denial.’” 153 The Court reasoned that “[j]oint
148
552 U.S. 120 (2008).
149
435 U.S. 475 (1978).
150
Id. at 489 (citing Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335 (1963); Hamilton v.
Alabama, 368 U.S. 52 (1961); White v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 59 (1963)).
151
Id. at 488.
152
Id.
153
Id. (quoting Glasser v. United States, 315 U.S. 60, 75-76 (1942)).
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representation of conflicting interests is suspect because of what it tends to
prevent the attorney from doing.” 154 Requiring a defendant to show
prejudice “in some specific fashion would not be susceptible of intelligent,
evenhanded application” under such circumstances. 155 The Court explained
that “to assess the impact of a conflict of interests on the attorney’s options,
tactics, and decisions in plea negotiations would be virtually impossible,” and
“would require, unlike most cases, unguided speculation.” 156
In support of the holding quoted above from Glasser v. United States 157
that “[t]he right to have the assistance of counsel is too fundamental and
absolute to allow courts to indulge in nice calculations as to the amount of
prejudice arising from its denial,” 158 the Supreme Court cited Tumey v.
Ohio. 159 The Court held in Tumey that “[n]o matter what the evidence was
against [the defendant], he had the right to have an impartial judge,” in
response to the argument “that the evidence shows clearly that the defendant
was guilty and that he was only fined $100 which was the minimum
amount.” 160 In the present case, there is strong evidence that Alvarez was in
fact guilty of murder.
Nevertheless, when a lawyer sleeps through a substantial portion of a
trial or a critical phase for which that lawyer has responsibility, such as the
direct testimony of State witnesses whom the lawyer will cross-examine, the
154
Id. at 489-90.
155
Id. at 490.
156
Id. at 491.
157
315 U.S. 60 (1942), superseded by statute on other grounds, Fed. R. Evid. 104(a),
as recognized in, Bourjaily v. United States, 483 U.S. 171, 181 (1987).
158
Holloway, 435 U.S. at 488.
159
273 U.S. 510 (1927); see also Glasser, 315 U.S. at 76.
160
Tumey, 273 U.S. at 535.
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defendant has no lawyer at all, even if co-counsel is present. As noted, co-
counsel is not permitted under well-understood practice in Texas courts to
cross-examine jointly or participate jointly in objections when a witness
testifies. The state trial court explicitly stated it was following this practice
during Alvarez’s trial. 161 Accordingly, as in Holloway, it would be virtually
impossible to assess what decisions the sleeping attorney-in-charge might
have made regarding objections, or how the attorney might have challenged
or discredited witnesses had the attorney been awake to hear all of the
testimony.
Two years before Holloway was decided, the Supreme Court held in
Geders v. United States 162 that preventing a client from having access to his
counsel during a seventeen-hour recess overnight in the midst of a ten-day
trial required reversal. 163 In that non-capital case, resulting in concurrent
sentences of three years of imprisonment, the defendant’s direct
examination had concluded, and he was cross-examined the next day, after
the overnight recess. 164 His counsel had requested but was denied the
opportunity to meet with the defendant during the overnight recess and
before the defendant retook the stand. Our court had affirmed the conviction
on the basis “that petitioner’s failure to claim any prejudice resulting from
his inability to consult with counsel during one evening of the trial was fatal
to his appeal.” 165 The Supreme Court reversed and remanded, holding,
without requiring a showing of prejudice, that “an order preventing
161
See, e.g., 19RR:137-38 (“Well, I’ve always agreed that only one lawyer from each
side has a right to make objections and not double team.”).
162
425 U.S. 80 (1976).
163
Id. at 88, 92.
164
Id. at 82-83, 85.
165
Id. at 86 (citing United States v. Fink, 502 F.2d 1 (5th Cir. 1974)).
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petitioner from consulting his counsel ‘about anything’ during a 17-hour
overnight recess between his direct-and cross-examination impinged upon
his right to the assistance of counsel guaranteed by the Sixth
Amendment.” 166
In 1984, the Supreme Court decided Cronic. It was a mail fraud case
in which a young, inexperienced attorney had been appointed as counsel for
the defendant. 167 The Court recognized that the defendant in the case before
it could “make out a claim of ineffective assistance only by pointing to
specific errors made by trial counsel,” and therefore that the Strickland
paradigm applied. 168 (The decisions in Cronic and Strickland issued the same
day.) But in the course of its discussion, the Court said in Cronic, “[t]here
are, however, circumstances that are so likely to prejudice the accused that
the cost of litigating their effect in a particular case is unjustified.” 169
In Cronic, the Court broadly identified at least three kinds of such
circumstances, as it later explained in Bell v. Cone. 170 “First and ‘[m]ost
obvious’ was the ‘complete denial of counsel.’” 171 The Court recounted in
Bell that “[a] trial would be presumptively unfair, we said, where the accused
is denied the presence of counsel at ‘a critical stage.’” 172 “Second,” the Bell
decision said, “we posited that a similar presumption was warranted if
‘counsel entirely fails to subject the prosecution’s case to meaningful
166
Id. at 91.
167
See United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 649-50 (1984).
168
Id. at 666.
169
Id. at 658.
170
535 U.S. 685 (2002).
171
Id. at 695 (alteration in original) (quoting Cronic, 466 U.S. at 659).
172
Id. (quoting Cronic, 466 U.S. at 659).
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adversarial testing.’” 173 “Finally,” the Bell opinion continued, “we said that
in cases like Powell v. Alabama, [287 U.S. 45 (1932)], where counsel is called
upon to render assistance under circumstances where competent counsel
very likely could not, the defendant need not show that the proceedings were
affected.” 174
In Bell, the Sixth Circuit had concluded counsel was ineffective during
the sentencing phase of a death penalty trial by failing to ask the jury for
mercy. 175 The Supreme Court reversed, rejecting the defendant’s
contention that his counsel’s failures fell within the second exception in
Cronic. 176 The Supreme Court explained that the defendant challenged
counsel’s performance as failing “to adduce mitigating evidence and the
waiver of closing argument.” 177 The Supreme Court held that
[h]ere, respondent’s argument is not that his counsel failed to
oppose the prosecution throughout the sentencing proceeding
as a whole, but that his counsel failed to do so at specific points.
For purposes of distinguishing between the rule of Strickland
and that of Cronic, this difference is not of degree but of kind. 178
Importantly for the present case, a claim that trial counsel slept during
significant parts of a trial falls most obviously within the first Cronic
exception. Sleeping counsel is no counsel at all. A defendant does not have
counsel while his lawyer sleeps in open court. As to the second Cronic
exception, to the extent it applies to a sleeping-lawyer claim, the Supreme
173
Id. at 696 (quoting Cronic, 466 U.S. at 659).
174
Id.
175
Id. at 693.
176
Id. at 696.
177
Id. at 697.
178
Id.
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Court observed in Bell that the state court was not “objectively
unreasonable” when it “deem[ed] counsel’s choice to waive argument a
tactical decision about which competent lawyers might disagree.” 179 Falling
asleep during trial is not a choice, much less a tactical decision. Nor is it a
“decision about which competent lawyers might disagree.” 180 Tactical
decisions and choices are generally governed by Strickland. We do not have
a tactical choice or decision before us.
At least four circuits—including our own—have held that when a
lawyer sleeps through a substantial portion of a trial, that conduct is
inherently prejudicial, compromises the reliability of the trial, and violates
the defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel. 181 Three of those
decisions pre-dated Van Patten, and the other, Ragin, did not distinguish Van
Patten but instead quoted it: “Cronic held that a Sixth Amendment violation
may be found ‘without inquiring into counsel’s actual performance or
requiring the defendant to show the effect it had on the trial’ when
‘circumstances [exist] that are so likely to prejudice the accused that the cost
of litigating their effect in a particular case is unjustified.’” 182
In Burdine v. Johnson, 183 a capital case, trial counsel “repeatedly dozed
or slept as the State questioned witnesses and presented evidence supporting
its case against” the defendant. 184 In habeas proceedings, evidence was
179
Id. at 702.
180
Id.
181
See Tippins v. Walker, 77 F.3d 682 (2d Cir. 1996); United States v. Ragin, 820
F.3d 609 (4th Cir. 2016); Burdine v. Johnson, 262 F.3d 336 (5th Cir. 2001) (en banc); Javor
v. United States, 724 F.2d 831 (9th Cir. 1984).
182
Ragin, 820 F.3d at 616 n.2 (quoting Wright v. Van Patten, 552 U.S. 120, 124
(2008)).
183
262 F.3d 336 (5th Cir. 2001) (en banc).
184
Id. at 339.
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presented from eight witnesses, including three jurors. 185 The State did not
dispute the facts to which they attested, but the State maintained “that
because [the state prisoner] cannot demonstrate precisely when [his counsel]
slept during his trial, he cannot prove that [his counsel] slept during critical
stages of his criminal proceeding.” 186 “The State suggest[ed] that because
[trial counsel] was physically present in the courtroom, his dozing
constituted a form of performance that should be subjected to prejudice
analysis.” 187 The State also “maintain[ed] that it is impossible to distinguish
between sleeping counsel and other impairments that nevertheless have been
subjected to prejudice analysis.” 188 Our en banc court disagreed.
Our court explained in Burdine that, “[a]s recognized by the Second
Circuit, ‘the buried assumption in our Strickland cases is that counsel is
present and conscious to exercise judgment, calculation and instinct, for
better or worse. But that is an assumption we cannot make when counsel is
unconscious at critical times.’” 189 We reasoned, “[w]hen we have no basis
for assuming that counsel exercised judgment on behalf of his client during
critical stages of trial, we have insufficient basis for trusting the fairness of
that trial and consequently must presume prejudice.” 190 We continued,
“[t]he unconscious attorney is in fact no different from an attorney that is
physically absent from trial since both are equally unable to exercise
judgment on behalf of their clients.” 191 We concluded that “[s]uch absence
185
Id.
186
Id. at 347.
187
Id. at 349.
188
Id.
189
Id. (quoting Tippins v. Walker, 77 F.3d 682, 687 (2d Cir. 1996)).
190
Id.
191
Id.
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of counsel at a critical stage of a proceeding makes the adversary process
unreliable, and thus a presumption of prejudice is warranted pursuant to
Cronic.” 192 The majority opinion distinguishes Burdine in a footnote noting
that Burdine did not involve two defense lawyers. 193
As indicated above, our decision in Burdine relied in part on the
Second Circuit’s decision in Tippins v. Walker. 194 The Tippins decision is
eloquent. Rather than summarize or paraphrase, I quote from it extensively,
as follows:
We are reluctant to extend a rule of per se prejudice in
any new direction. Ordinarily, episodes of inattention or
slumber are perfectly amenable to analysis under the Strickland
prejudice test. And, as respondent argues, there are real
dangers in presuming prejudice merely from a lack of alertness.
Prolonged inattention during stretches of a long trial (by sleep,
preoccupation or otherwise), particularly during periods
concerned with other defendants, uncontested issues, or
matters peripheral to a particular defendant, may be
quantitatively substantial but without consequence. At such
times, even alert and resourceful counsel cannot affect the
proceedings to a client’s advantage.
However, as the majority reasoned in Javor [v. United
States, 724 F.2d 831 (9th Cir. 1984)], “[p]rejudice is inherent”
at some point, “because unconscious or sleeping counsel is
equivalent to no counsel at all.” 724 F.2d at 834. Effectiveness
of counsel depends in part on the ability to confer with the
client during trial on a continuous basis, and the attorney must
be “present and attentive” in order to make adequate cross-
examination—“a matter of constitutional importance” by
192
Id. (referencing United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648 (1984)).
193
Ante at 21 n.15.
194
77 F.3d 682 (2d Cir. 1996).
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virtue of the Sixth Amendment. Id. Moreover, if counsel
sleeps, the ordinary analytical tools for identifying prejudice
are unavailable. The errors and lost opportunities may not be
visible in the record, and the reviewing court applying the
traditional Strickland analysis may be forced to engage in
“unguided speculation.” Id. (quoting Cooper v. Fitzharris, 586
F.2d 1325, 1332 (9th Cir. 1978) ([e]n banc) (citation omitted),
cert. denied, 440 U.S. 974, 99 S. Ct. 1542, 59 L.Ed.2d 793
(1979)).
...
Although respondent argues that Tippins failed to carry
his burden of adducing specific attorney errors resulting in
prejudice, we understand Tippins’ claim of prejudice to be not
that his lawyer should have taken any particular initiative that
would potentially affect the result, but that, at critical times,
Tippins had no counsel to sort out what initiatives were open.
Under these circumstances, where the adversary nature of the
proceeding was subject to repeated suspensions, there is little
difference between saying that prejudice will be presumed and
saying that prejudice has been demonstrated.
We therefore conclude that Tippins suffered prejudice,
by presumption or otherwise, if his counsel was repeatedly
unconscious at trial for periods of time in which defendant’s
interests were at stake. Such circumstances implicate a
fundamental value that Strickland enjoins us to keep in mind:
A number of practical considerations are
important for the application of the standards we
have outlined. Most important, in adjudicating a
claim of actual ineffectiveness of counsel, a court
should keep in mind that the principles we have
stated do not establish mechanical rules.
Although those principles should guide the
process of decision, the ultimate focus of inquiry
must be on the fundamental fairness of the
proceeding whose result is being challenged. In
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every case the court should be concerned with
whether, despite the strong presumption of
reliability, the result of the particular proceeding
is unreliable because of a breakdown in the
adversarial process that our system counts on to
produce just results.
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 696, 104 S. Ct. at 2069. 195
In addition to the Second Circuit, the Fourth and Ninth Circuits have
held that because counsel slept during a substantial portion of the
defendant’s trial, prejudice could be presumed. 196 The Sixth Circuit did not
rule out the application of such a presumption in Muniz v. Smith, 197 instead
concluding that the defendant “cannot establish that his trial counsel was
asleep for a substantial portion of his trial” because at most, his counsel “was
asleep for an undetermined portion of a single cross-examination.” 198 That
court observed that the “record shows that Muniz’s attorney was not asleep
for the entire cross since he objected near the end of the questioning,” and
that “[t]his is especially significant, given that the total cross-examination
195
Id. at 686-87.
196
See United States v. Ragin, 820 F.3d 609, 612 (4th Cir. 2016) (holding “that a
defendant is deprived of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel when counsel sleeps during
a substantial portion of the defendant’s trial,” “such conduct compromises the reliability
of the trial, and thus no separate showing of prejudice is necessary,” and “[t]his case
presents such a situation”); Javor v. United States, 724 F.2d 831, 833-834 (9th Cir. 1984)
(holding “[t]oday we conclude that when an attorney for a criminal defendant sleeps
through a substantial portion of the trial, such conduct is inherently prejudicial and thus no
separate showing of prejudice is necessary,” and that the defendant’s “sixth amendment
right to counsel was violated not because of specific legal errors or omissions indicating
incompetence, but because he had no legal assistance during a substantial portion of his
trial.”).
197
647 F.3d 619 (6th Cir. 2011).
198
Id. at 623-24.
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was fairly short, spanning only 26 pages of trial transcript.” 199 The Sixth
Circuit concluded that “Muniz’s lawyer therefore must have only been
asleep for a brief period.” 200
The decisions from the Second, Fourth, and Ninth Circuits support
granting relief in this case, and, as already noted, so does our own decision in
Burdine. However, the Supreme Court’s decision in Woods v. Donald 201 may
counsel against presuming prejudice under Cronic. In Woods, during a multi-
defendant trial, defense counsel for one of the defendants “was briefly absent
during testimony concerning other defendants.” 202 Counsel had “indicated
that the exhibit and testimony did not apply to his client” and after re-
entering the courtroom, confirmed to the trial court that “‘[Y]es, your
Honor, and as I had indicated on the record, I had no dog in the race and no
interest in that.’” 203 The Sixth Circuit held that the “attorney provided per
se ineffective assistance of counsel under Cronic.” 204 The Supreme Court
reversed.
The Court first re-confirmed that “courts may presume that a
defendant has suffered unconstitutional prejudice if he ‘is denied counsel at
a critical stage of his trial.’” 205 The Court also reiterated that in Bell, “we
characterized a ‘critical stage’ as one that ‘held significant consequences for
the accused.’” 206 It would seem that cross-examination of State witnesses in
199
Id. at 624.
200
Id.
201
575 U.S. 312 (2015).
202
Id. at 313.
203
Id. at 314.
204
Id. at 313.
205
Id. at 315 (quoting Cronic, 466 U.S. at 659).
206
Id. (quoting Bell v. Cone, 535 U.S. 685, 696 (2002)).
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a capital case holds significant consequences for that defendant. However,
the Supreme Court chided the appellate court, observing, “[w]ithout
identifying any decision from this Court directly [o]n point, the Sixth Circuit
concluded that the relevant testimony in this case was ‘similar to’ our cases
applying Cronic.” 207 The Supreme Court ultimately held, “[a]ll that matters
here, and all that should have mattered to the Sixth Circuit, is that we have
not held that Cronic applies to the circumstances presented in this case.” 208
That is a categorical statement.
Nevertheless, there are passages in Woods v. Donald that perhaps add
context to that categorical statement. First, the Supreme Court
characterized “the circumstances presented” as “prosecution testimony
about other defendants” and “counsel’s absence during testimony that is
irrelevant within the defendant’s own theory of the case.” 209 Second, the
Supreme Court indicated in Woods that the “contours of Cronic” may
preclude a fairminded jurist from concluding that a presumption of prejudice
is unwarranted when counsel is absent for more than a short amount of time
during testimony about her own client’s theory of the case. 210 The Supreme
Court said, “Within the contours of Cronic, a fairminded jurist could
conclude that a presumption of prejudice is not warranted by counsel’s short
absence during testimony about other defendants where that testimony was
irrelevant to the defendant's theory of the case.” 211 Third, the Supreme
Court again made clear that “Cronic applies in ‘circumstances that are so
likely to prejudice the accused that the cost of litigating their effect in a
207
Id.
208
Id. at 319.
209
Id. at 318-19.
210
Id. at 318.
211
Id.
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particular case is unjustified.’” 212 The “Michigan Court of Appeals’ refusal
to apply [the Cronic presumption of prejudice] to these circumstances [where
counsel was briefly absent during testimony about other defendants not
relevant to his client] was not the ‘extreme malfunction’ required for federal
habeas relief.” 213 I submit that counsel’s sleeping during the direct
examination of witnesses he then cross-examines is so likely to prejudice the
accused that the cost of litigating its effect in a capital case is unjustified.
On the other hand, the Supreme Court also said in Woods, “Just last
Term we warned the Sixth Circuit that ‘where the “precise contours” of [a]
right remain “unclear,” state courts enjoy “broad discretion” in their
adjudication of a prisoner’s claims.’” 214 It is difficult to say with confidence
whether the Supreme Court has been clear enough regarding the precise
contours of a defendant’s right to counsel in a capital case and of Cronic’s
contours when counsel is absent during witness testimony due to the fact that
he is asleep.
Although I see the logic in the decisions from other circuits that have
applied Cronic in sleeping-lawyer cases, I do not resolve whether Cronic
applies in the present case. That is because I conclude there was prejudice.
As discussed above, the proceedings were robbed of their gravity. The jury
could readily conclude that Alvarez’s guilt and his fate were foregone
conclusions, and that the trial was a hollow process not meant to
meaningfully test the prosecution’s case or its desired outcome, which was a
death sentence. The proceedings gave the unmistakable impression that
Alvarez did not deserve to have a lawyer who could manage to stay awake
212
Id. (quoting Cronic, 466 U.S. at 658).
213
Id. at 318-19 (quoting Harrington v. Richter, 562 U.S. 86, 102 (2011)).
214
Id. at 318 (quoting White v. Woodall, 572 U.S. 415, 424 (2014)).
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during parts of the trial in which he actively participated. A disengaged,
slumbering lawyer was good enough for Alvarez.
IV
The State argues that granting habeas relief under Cronic would
violate Teague v. Lane 215 because “Alvarez had two lawyers.” 216 The
majority opinion agrees in a footnote. 217 With respect, both are wrong.
Under Teague, “[n]ew procedural rules . . . do not apply retroactively
on federal collateral review.” 218 A procedural rule is one that “alter[s] ‘only
the manner of determining the defendant’s culpability.’” 219 “A rule is new
unless it was ‘dictated by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s
conviction became final.’” 220 “In other words, a rule is new unless, at the
time the conviction became final, the rule was already ‘apparent to all
reasonable jurists.’” 221 On the “flipside,” however, “Teague also made clear
that a case does not ‘announce a new rule, [when] it “[is] merely an
application of the principle that governed”’ a prior decision to a different set
of facts.” 222 “Otherwise said, when all we do is apply a general standard to
215
489 U.S. 288 (1989).
216
ECF 85 at 5 (State Suppl. Merits Br.).
217
See ante at 20 n.13.
218
Edwards v. Vannoy, 593 U.S. 255, 276 (2021).
219
Id. (quoting Schriro v. Summerlin, 542 U.S. 348, 353 (2004)).
220
Id. at 265 (quoting Teague ,489 U.S. at 301).
221
Id. (quoting Lambrix v. Singletary, 520 U.S. 518, 528 (1997)).
222
Chaidez v. United States, 568 U.S. 342, 347-48 (2013) (alterations in original)
(quoting Teague, 489 U.S. at 307).
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the kind of factual circumstances it was meant to address, we will rarely state
a new rule for Teague purposes.” 223
The Supreme Court has made clear “that ‘the AEDPA and Teague
inquiries are distinct.’” 224 That said, the Court has also explained that
“‘clearly established’ law is not ‘new’ within the meaning of Teague.” 225
Importantly, AEDPA does not “relieve[] courts from the responsibility of
addressing properly raised Teague arguments.” 226
If Cronic is applied to presume that Alvarez’s sleeping lawyer
prejudiced his defense, this would not violate Teague. Cronic itself, which
was decided in 1984, instructs that we should presume prejudice. This would
be a “garden-variety application[]” of Cronic’s “general standard to the kind
of factual circumstances it was meant to address.” 227
V
As a procedural matter, I agree with the majority opinion that “there
is no indication that the state courts did not adjudicate the sleeping-lawyer
claim on the merits.” 228 The federal district court ably explained why it
concluded the sleeping-lawyer claim was actually adjudicated by the state
courts on the merits and was not dismissed by the state courts on procedural
223
Id. at 348.
224
Greene v. Fisher, 565 U.S. 34, 39 (2011) (quoting Horn v. Banks, 536 U.S. 266,
272 (2002)).
225
Chaidez, 568 U.S. at 348 n.4 (citing Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 412 (2000)
(O’Connor, J.)). See generally Brian R. Means, Postconviction Remedies
§§ 26:20, 29:23 (Aug. 2024 update) (discussing relationship between Teague and
AEDPA).
226
Horn, 536 U.S. at 272.
227
Chaidez, 568 U.S. at 348.
228
Ante at 11.
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grounds. 229 I fully agree with the district court’s analysis on this point. I
comment on the analysis because our court expended considerable time
ascertaining whether the district court’s assessment was correct given the
vacillating arguments made by the State and the complexity of the record.
I also note that in our court, the State did not pursue a contention that
the sleeping-lawyer claim was procedurally defaulted. To the contrary, the
State argued the merits of the sleeping-lawyer claim. 230
Our panel queried the parties as to the procedural posture of the
sleeping-lawyer claim. The State’s written response explained that it was
satisfied that there was no clear factual or legal determination by the federal
district court that the state courts had decided the sleeping-lawyer claim on
the merits:
To be sure, the Director argued extensively in the district court
that the instant IATC claims were not properly exhausted and
procedurally defaulted. See, e.g., ROA.2970–3016. Those
arguments were rejected by the district court. ROA.3065–69.
Following that decision, the Director evaluated the district
court’s opinion and found insufficient grounds to appeal the
district court’s decision. The district court correctly
ascertained the facts and observed that the district attorney
responded to the IATC claims raised in Alvarez’s reply brief,
the trial court considered them validly raised, and the CCA did
not explicitly state that the claims were being denied as an
abuse of the writ. ROA.3068. While the Director obviously
would have resolved the issue differently in the first instance,
there was no clear factual or legal error that would have
justified wasting this Court’s time with further litigation. This
229
See Alvarez v. Davis, No. 4:09-CV-3040, 2017 WL 4844570, at *24-25 (S.D.
Tex. Oct. 25, 2017); ROA.3065-68 (same). .
230
ECF 40 at 19-25 (State Resp. in Opp’n to Appeal for Certificate of
Appealability); ECF 85 at 3-8 (State Suppl. Merits Br.).
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is especially true given the district court found that any
ineffectiveness claims failed even under de novo review, see
ROA.3065—the most lenient standard available to the habeas
petitioner. The Director therefore saw no need to waste the
Court’s time litigating an issue that had no ultimate effect on
the resolution of the case. In fact, additional litigation on the
posture issue would have merely delayed these already lengthy
proceedings, again, to the detriment of the Director and
Alvarez’s victims. 231
Though neither the state habeas trial court nor the TCCA mentioned
the sleeping-lawyer claim expressly in their respective rulings, we should
conclude that those rulings were on the merits as to all issues. The posture
of this case is similar to that before the Supreme Court in Johnson v.
Williams. 232 In that case, a state court ruled against the defendant in an
opinion that addressed some issues but did not expressly address the federal
claim in question. 233 The Supreme Court held that in such a situation, it is
presumed, subject to rebuttal, that the state court adjudicated the federal
claim on the merits. 234
VI
In August 2019, more than eighteen months after this appeal was filed,
Alvarez asked this court to consider an affidavit that Reyes, lead trial counsel
in the state-court murder trial, executed on August 19, 2019, twenty years
after trial. Reyes’s affidavit avers that, in 2008, Alvarez’s state habeas
attorneys asked Reyes if he had slept during the trial, and Reyes “denied it
231
ECF 105 at 14-15 (Resp’t-Appellee’s Suppl. Br.) (filed January 14, 2022)
(footnote omitted).
232
568 U.S. 289 (2013).
233
Id. at 292-93.
234
Id. at 293.
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was even possible and refused to discuss the matter further.” 235 Reyes now
states in his affidavit that “it is quite likely that [he] fell asleep during” the
trial and that he “would not dispute” the jurors’ sworn statements that he
did sleep during the trial. 236 He states that he was not telling the truth when
he denied the possibility of sleeping during the trial to Alvarez’s state habeas
attorneys. 237 He further avers that due to his serious medical issues, he has
“had similar experiences and effects in other instances, both before Mr.
Alvarez’s trial and after.” 238 Reyes’s affidavit also states that prior to the
trial, he did not know John Denninger, who was second-chair counsel for
Alvarez’s trial, and that his “interactions with Mr. Denninger were sparse
before and during trial.” 239 Further, Reyes did not “recall ever working with
[Denninger] outside court during the case.” 240
Alvarez filed a motion in our court to expand the record, to remand to
the district court, or in the alternative, to hold the appeal in abeyance to allow
him to return to state court to present this new evidence. The majority
opinion denies Alvarez’s motion. 241
I agree that we cannot consider the 2019 Reyes affidavit. In Cullen v.
Pinholster, 242 the Supreme Court held that “review under [28 U.S.C.]
§ 2254(d)(1) is limited to the record that was before the state court that
235
Aff. of Frumencio Reyes at 2 ¶ 8, attached as Ex. A to ECF 53 (Alvarez Mot. to
Expand the R.).
236
Id. at 4 ¶ 15.
237
Id. at 4 ¶ 16.
238
Id.
239
Id. at 2 ¶¶ 6-7.
240
Id. at 2 ¶ 7.
241
See ante at 2 n.1.
242
563 U.S. 170 (2011).
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adjudicated the claim on the merits.” 243 The Supreme Court has therefore
made it clear that unless the evidence was presented to the state habeas court,
a federal court may not consider it in habeas proceedings in the procedural
posture of a case like this one.
However, I would—in the alternative to granting habeas relief based
on the record that was before the state court—grant Alvarez’s motion that
we stay proceedings to allow the TCCA to consider the affidavit.
In Joyner v. King, 244 this court held that “new factual allegations in
support of a previously asserted legal theory” rendered a claim unexhausted,
“even though these factual allegations came into existence after state habeas
relief had been denied.” 245 In Graham v. Johnson, 246 we held that because the
petitioner had presented “significant evidentiary support” for his claims that
had not been presented to the state court, the claim was not exhausted. 247
Although Joyner and Graham were pre-AEDPA cases, we have continued to
adhere to this precedent after AEDPA. In a post-AEDPA case, this court
stated that we “have consistently held that a ‘petitioner fails to exhaust state
remedies when he presents material additional evidentiary support to the
federal court that was not presented to the state court.’” 248 We have
explained that “the new evidence must be so significant that it
243
Id. at 181.
244
786 F.2d 1317 (5th Cir. 1986).
245
Id. at 1320.
246
94 F.3d 958 (5th Cir. 1996).
247
Id. at 969.
248
Anderson v. Johnson, 338 F.3d 382, 386 (5th Cir. 2003) (quoting Graham, 94
F.3d at 968).
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‘fundamentally alter[s] the legal claim’ such that, in fairness, the claim ought
to be ‘remitted to state court for consideration of that evidence.’” 249
Here, counsel’s affidavit asserts that he was previously untruthful
when he denied the possibility of sleeping during trial. He does not now
dispute that he slept during trial. He further admits that due to his serious
medical issues, he has “had similar experiences and effects in other
instances, both before Mr. Alvarez’s trial and after.” 250 This is material
evidentiary support that fundamentally alters the sleeping-lawyer claim such
that, in fairness, it should be remanded to state court for consideration of that
claim.
Alvarez has moved for a stay in order to exhaust his state remedies,
and the Supreme Court has opined that a stay and abeyance is appropriate
under certain circumstances. 251 There must be good cause for the failure to
exhaust the claim, the claim must not be “plainly meritless,” 252 and the
request must not be “for purposes of delay.” 253
I would conclude that there was good cause for the failure to obtain
this new evidence because Reyes refused to tell what he now says is the truth
until he executed the affidavit at issue. Lead counsel’s sleeping during a
249
Ward v. Stephens, 777 F.3d 250, 258 (5th Cir. 2015) (alteration in original)
(quoting Conner v. Quarterman, 477 F.3d 287, 292 (5th Cir. 2007)), abrogated on other
grounds by, Ayestas v. Davis, 584 U.S. 28 (2018)).
250
Aff. of Frumencio Reyes at 4 ¶ 16, attached as Ex. A to ECF 53 (Alvarez Mot.
to Expand the R.).
251
Rhines v. Weber, 544 U.S. 269, 277 (2005).
252
Id. (citing 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(2)).
253
Sandoval Mendoza v. Lumpkin, 81 F.4th 461, 482 (5th Cir. 2023) (citing Rhines,
544 U.S. at 277-78).
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capital trial is not a plainly meritless claim of ineffective assistance. 254 The
delay in obtaining this new evidence was not due to Alvarez’s conduct but
instead to Reyes’s withholding of what jurors, and now he, says is the truth.
Alvarez filed the new affidavit in this court three days after it was signed. I
would therefore conclude Alvarez is entitled to a stay and abeyance of these
proceedings so that he may submit his claim to the state courts.
The State argues that the new affidavit is procedurally barred, and
thus any reliance on it would be plainly meritless, because the Texas courts
will find a subsequent application to be an abuse of the writ. 255 Although
Texas has restrictions on filing subsequent applications, it allows
consideration of a subsequent application if that application establishes that
the claim could not have been presented in a previous application “because
the factual or legal basis for the claim was unavailable on the date the
applicant filed the previous application.” 256 Because it is not clear whether
the claim would be barred under Texas law in the present circumstances, I
conclude that “Texas courts should make that determination.” 257
Finally, I am satisfied that Alvarez’s request is not for purposes of
delay. Alvarez argues that his “prior efforts to pursue these facts in state and
federal court show the opposite of dilatoriness” and that “if in either
jurisdiction the courts had provided him the formal evidentiary development
that he requested, they would likely have been presented long ago.” 258 The
254
Cf. Burdine v. Johnson, 262 F.3d 336, 338 (5th Cir. 2001) (en banc) (“When a
state court finds on the basis of credible evidence that defense counsel repeatedly slept as
evidence was being introduced against a defendant, that defendant has been denied counsel
at a critical stage of his trial.”).
255
ECF 57 at 13-14 (State Resp. in Opp’n to Mot. to Expand the R.).
256
Tex. Code Crim. Pro. Ann. art. 11.071, § 5(a)(1).
257
Wilder v. Cockrell, 274 F.3d 255, 263 (5th Cir. 2001).
258
ECF 53 at 14 (Alvarez Mot. to Expand the R.).
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State argues that “Alvarez acted dilatorily in state court during his last
federal stay,” citing the district court’s observation that Alvarez did not
immediately file his third state application but instead sought funding to
investigate and prepare habeas claims. 259 The State also argues the “claim is
based on a factual predicate that was discovered by Alvarez no later than the
time of his state habeas review or . . . could have been found sooner through
the use of due diligence.” 260 However, the State apparently agreed in the
state trial court that Alvarez would first litigate investigation funding before
filing a third state application. 261 Although that litigation took around a year
and ultimately resulted in no investigation funding, 262 the mere fact that
Alvarez zealously sought investigation funding before filing a third state
application—a process to which the State had agreed—surely cannot now
support the State’s argument that Alvarez’s conduct was dilatory. The
State’s second argument is unpersuasive for the same reasons Alvarez has
established good cause for the failure to exhaust.
259
ECF 57 at 18 (State Resp. in Opp’n to Mot. to Expand the R.) (citing
ROA. 3029).
260
ECF 57 at 18 (State Resp. in Opp’n to Mot. to Expand the R.).
261
ROA.3280 (Alvarez Sep. 2013 Mot. for Pre-Application Funds for
Investigation) (“On September 13, 2013, after the parties had conferred previously, the
[state trial] Court held a status conference regarding the appropriate proceedings to follow.
It was agreed at this hearing that Mr. Alvarez would file the instant motion [for
investigation funding] on or before September 23, 2013, and that a hearing would be held
on this motion on Thursday, October 3, 2013. This motion is being filed in accordance with
the agreed schedule.”); ROA.3372 (January 2014 trial court order denying funds) (noting
the same); ROA.3322 (Alvarez June 2014 TCCA Mandamus Pet. Seeking Funds) (noting
the same); ROA.3394-96, 3399 (June 2014 trial court status hearing transcript day after
Alvarez filed for mandamus relief) (noting the same, but also noting “the State is frustrated
that it has taken this long”).
262
ROA.4473-76 (third state application detailing procedural history of this
funding litigation).
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I would alternatively grant Alvarez’s motion to hold the appeal in
abeyance.
* * *
Because I would grant habeas relief as to the sleeping-lawyer issue, I
do not reach any of the other merits issues presented in this appeal. I
respectfully dissent from the denial of habeas relief.
82
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.