Check how courts have cited this case. Use our free citator for the most current treatment.
No. 10356893
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
Jeremiah Sweeney v. Richard Graham, Jr.
No. 10356893 · Decided March 13, 2025
No. 10356893·Fourth Circuit · 2025·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
Decided
March 13, 2025
Citation
No. 10356893
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 1 of 96
UNPUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 22-6513
JEREMIAH ANTOINE SWEENEY,
Petitioner - Appellant,
v.
RICHARD J. GRAHAM, JR., Warden, Western Correctional Institution;
ANTHONY G. BROWN, Maryland Attorney General,
Respondents - Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, at Greenbelt.
Paul W. Grimm, Senior Judge. (8:19-cv-01289-PWG)
Argued: September 26, 2024 Decided: March 13, 2025
Before GREGORY and QUATTLEBAUM, Circuit Judges, and Terrence W. BOYLE,
United States District Judge for the Eastern District of North Carolina, sitting by
designation.
Reversed and remanded with instructions by unpublished opinion. Judge Gregory wrote
the opinion, in which Judge Boyle joined. Judge Quattlebaum wrote a dissenting opinion.
ARGUED: Michael James Confusione, HEGGE & CONFUSIONE, LLC, Mullica Hill, New
Jersey, for Appellant. Andrew John DiMiceli, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
OF MARYLAND, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Anthony G. Brown,
Attorney General, Criminal Appeals Division, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
OF MARYLAND, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellees.
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 2 of 96
GREGORY, Circuit Judge:
This is a murder case in which Defendant Jeremiah Sweeney invoked his
constitutional right to a jury trial. At that jury trial, his defense attorney Justin Nunzio
presented no evidence and called no witnesses. The government’s case was built on
eyewitness testimony placing Sweeney as the shooter––late at night, on a crowded street,
and with Sweeney almost a football field’s length away from the decedent. Vantage point
was an issue; light was an issue; Sweeney’s position and the angle of the decedent’s bullet
wound was an issue. The jury was presented with a diagram of the crime scene at trial.
The murder weapon was never found. The government’s burden to prove Sweeney guilty
beyond a reasonable doubt balanced entirely on whether the jury believed the eyewitness
testimony.
After the presentation of the evidence concluded but before the jury began its
deliberations, Juror No. 4 visited the crime scene at night to “get an accurate view.” The
next day, after thirty-five minutes of deliberations, the judge was informed of Juror No. 4’s
unauthorized visit. After fifty-eight minutes, the jury was brought into the courtroom.
Both the judge and Nunzio failed to sufficiently question Juror No. 4, and both failed to
ask any questions of the other jurors. Instead, without knowing what other jurors
specifically had been told, but despite there having been enough discussion that Juror No.
4 could state that the other jurors “would have no problem with basing their decision[] off
of the evidence which was presented in the case,” only Juror No. 4 was excused, and
Sweeney was swiftly convicted by the potentially-tainted eleven-member jury.
2
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 3 of 96
The circumstances of this case––hopefully very rare to occur––undermine the
essence of a jury trial as well as the burden of proof in our criminal system. Sweeney was
entitled to a fair and impartial jury, reaching a verdict based solely on the evidence
presented in the courtroom, and to a presumption of innocence unless and until the
government met its burden of proving him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Here, Juror
No. 4 had some doubt, so he went to the crime scene at night to get “an actual visual” and
walk through the area. But Juror No. 4’s doubt should not have been resolved by anything
seen or heard outside the courtroom, and the government should have been held to its
burden based on the evidence presented at trial.
Juror No 4’s actions were just the tip of the iceberg: Judge and defense counsel both
failed in their responsibilities. The trial court judge did not properly inquire into the jury
taint. Nunzio rendered representation far short of what is objectively reasonable. The
breakdown of the judicial process in this case––from juror to judge to attorney––deprived
Sweeney of his constitutional rights, and he is therefore entitled to a new trial. We reverse
the district court’s denial of Sweeney’s petition.
I.
Jeremiah Sweeney was charged with eleven counts related to an April 2010
murder in Prince George’s County, Maryland. J.A. 14, 274, 443. Represented by
attorney Justin Nunzio, Sweeney chose to proceed to a jury trial in June 2011 before the
state circuit court. J.A. 5, 14. During preliminary instructions, the trial court judge
3
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 4 of 96
instructed the jurors to not conduct research or investigation into the case on their own.
J.A. 462.
Over four days, the government presented its case through sixteen witnesses. J.A.
313. The defense did not present any witnesses nor evidence. See J.A. 79.
Numerous government witnesses testified that Sweeney had been arguing with
neighbors about stolen marijuana; he then opened fire, missing his intended targets and
instead fatally wounding a bystander from approximately seventy-five yards away, across a
street with parking on both sides. J.A. 16–17, 224; see also Opening Br. at 22. The
government admitted into evidence a diagram of the crime scene that had been discussed by
numerous witnesses, published to the jury, and discussed during closing argument. See J.A.
183. All witnesses testified that the murder weapon was a black gun, J.A. 146, but the
government never produced the murder weapon, J.A. 17, see also Opening Br. at 2 n.1. Only
one government witness testified to seeing Sweeney with a black gun, J.A. 17, and Nunzio
had questioned the reliability of that witness’ vision and memory on cross-examination, J.A.
114–15. A silver gun found in Sweeney’s house was admitted into evidence by stipulation.
J.A. 67–69. At trial, a firearms examiner testified that this silver gun could not have been
used to fire the shell casings found at the crime scene. J.A. 68, 322.
On cross-examination, Nunzio elicited testimony that might have suggested a
different shooter. He believed this testimony demonstrated that the decedent’s bullet
wound, which showed that the bullet entered the back of his head and exited the front, was
not consistent with the angle where Sweeney was in relation to the decedent; rather, it was
consistent with the position of another individual at the scene, David Walls. J.A. 91–92,
4
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 5 of 96
293. However, while some witnesses testified that they had seen Walls with a gun, see
J.A. 318, 320, they testified that Walls did not shoot the decedent, J.A. 93. Furthermore,
the firearms examiner testified that Walls’ gun, which had been turned over, also could not
have been used to fire the casings found at the scene. J.A. 322.
All in all, the government’s case was built almost entirely on eyewitness testimony
placing Sweeney as the shooter. As Nunzio later stated, “[t]he gun was never found and
all the government had was [ ] statements from witnesses. There was no . . . ‘forensic
evidence’ of the gun or the shell casings . . . . It was all testimony.” J.A. 110.
In the evening of the fourth day of trial, after the government rested its case and
before deliberations began, Juror Number 4 took an unauthorized visit to the crime scene.
The morning of the fifth day, the judge excused the alternate jurors. J.A. 187–88. The jury
began its deliberations shortly after 10:15 am. J.A. 188. Thirty-five minutes later, at 10:50
am, the judge received a note from the jury. J.A. 189. Fifty-eight minutes after
deliberations began, at 11:13 am, the jury was brought into the courtroom, at which time
the judge asked Juror No. 4 to approach the bench. J.A. 190. The rest of the jury remained
in the courtroom. J.A. 84, 190. The record does not reflect whether the courtroom husher 1
was on, although the conversation appears to have occurred privately, albeit with the
remaining jurors observing. See J.A. 84–85, 190. The following colloquy ensued:
THE COURT: I’ve got a note that says:
1
A “husher” is a white-noise device that allows the discussion of sensitive, ex parte,
or otherwise off-the-record information in a manner only heard by certain parties, in this
instance likely the court, the attorneys, Sweeney, and Juror No. 4.
5
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 6 of 96
“Juror Number 4 went to the crime scene yesterday to
walk through the scene and a couple of witnesses 2 were
there. Is this okay? There was no interaction.”
Tell me what happened.
JUROR NO. 4: I just got out and went by the scene, just basically the
crime scene, Your Honor. I just wanted to get a visual
because I know – I see topographical views all the time
and I know that that does not give an accurate – well,
there’s a better way to get an accurate view, which is to
see a visual, an actual visual. And that’s what I did. I
spoke to no one.
THE COURT: Is this in any way going to affect your –
JUROR NO. 4: No, sir. Not at all.
THE COURT: You can go back to your seat, please.
NUNZIO: Your Honor, if I may?
Do any of the other jurors know that you went there?
JUROR NO. 4: They do. But they stopped me, too, because they
thought that I should stop talking and I present what I
just said to you all.
NUNZIO: As a result of that, if you were to go into deliberations,
would you be able to deliberate based upon the facts
here as opposed to what –
GOV’T ATT’Y: What you saw?
NUNZIO: – what you saw?
JUROR NO. 4: That is correct. I would have no problem with basing
my decision, and they would have no problem with
basing their decision, off of the evidence which was
presented in the case.
NUNZIO: You know where I’m coming from?
2
The witnesses whom Juror No. 4 indicated he saw were government witnesses, as
the defense did not put on any witnesses. See J.A. 79.
6
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 7 of 96
JUROR NO. 4: Yes, sir. Yes, sir.
THE COURT: Thank you.
J.A. 190–92. This concluded the inquiry of Juror No. 4, and he at some point
thereafter returned to the jury box. See J.A. 195–96.
The parties then discussed options for moving forward:
NUNZIO: Does the Court have a preference?
GOV’T ATT’Y: But do you want – I know that you were going through
this before. Do you want to take the entire jury and have
them go through the neighborhood in conjunction with
the Sheriff’s Department?
NUNZIO: Well, here is my problem – he can’t help but tell them
what he saw.
THE COURT: I know. I don’t have a strong preferences [sic]. I mean,
I can instruct – they know he went there.
GOV’T ATT’Y: I would ask that a – in conjunction with the Sheriff’s
Department, that they would be allowed to go to the
crime scene. But not get out, not talk to anybody, but –
NUNZIO: And if that’s the only way to cure what you’re – that’s
it.
THE COURT: I’m not sure that’s even doable.
NUNZIO: We probably can’t do it today.
THE COURT: Well, and it requires a whole lot of effort.
NUNZIO: Logistics.
GOV’T ATT’Y: It won’t be today, and it won’t be before Monday.
NUNZIO: And the Defense has no objection with that.
THE COURT: I’m not sure that I can do it.
GOV’T ATT’Y: Can we check with the Sheriff’s Department?
7
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 8 of 96
THE COURT: I’ll check. . . .
J.A. 192–93. The court then told Nunzio to speak to his client, which he did for less than
two minutes. J.A. 194. Nunzio then reported to the court:
NUNZIO: I posed three options to him. He was very favorable –
if this juror saw the scene, he would prefer all of them
to take a look at the scene, if it’s possible. That way
they have the same perspective as Juror Number 4 and
that way they are all equal going back into the
deliberation room.
GOV’T ATT’Y: I think that’s the best option.
THE COURT: And if that’s not possible, what?
NUNZIO: Then I would probably just strike Juror Number 4.
[Some conversation regarding logistics omitted]
GOV’T ATT’Y: . . . [I]f it’s not a viable option [to visit the crime scene],
maybe we should just strike Juror Number 4 from the
pool.
THE COURT: He is agreeable to that?
NUNZIO: I think he would be. He doesn’t want to, but he would
very, very much prefer everybody see what he saw.
J.A. 194–95. The judge indicated that he would look into a potential crime scene visit. He
then called Juror No. 4 back to the bench and instructed him to “not [ ] discuss anything that
happened during your tour of the crime scene. . . . Any experiences you had, that’s not
something I want you to share with anybody else.” J.A. 195–96. Juror No. 4 answered,
“Yes, sir.” J.A. 196. Juror No. 4 then returned to the jury box with the rest of the jurors. Id.
At 11:23 am, the judge then excused the jurors––including Juror No. 4––to the jury
lounge while the judge inquired with the Sheriff’s Department about the potential crime
scene visit. Id.; J.A. 86 (Maryland Circuit Court judge stating, “So now all twelve jurors
8
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 9 of 96
are in the jury lounge”); J.A. 382 (Sweeney’s pro se petition for postconviction relief
stating that “Juror #4 return[ed] to deliberation room after informing member of the jury
about visiting the scene of the crime”); J.A. 490–91 (district court opinion stating that “The
jury was excused and permitted to remain together in the jury lounge.”); but see J.A. 82
(Nunzio testifying that he believed only “[t]he eleven” were together in the room). The
attorneys and the judge acknowledged that the jurors would likely continue to talk about
the case during the recess. They discussed:
THE COURT: They can talk. I don’t know what else to do.
NUNZIO: He can’t be part of the process.
THE COURT: I told him not to be sharing any of these experiences.
NUNZIO: Absolutely right. While they are there they might as
well do something.
GOV’T ATT’Y: Instead of waiting around.
THE COURT: Unless I put them in 12 different rooms. Well, I have
one more thing to do and I will talk to the sheriff.
J.A. 196–97. The judge never gave an instruction to the jurors not to deliberate during that
time, nor an instruction to the eleven jurors to avoid discussing or considering anything
Juror No. 4 had told them. The jurors were together in the jury lounge for approximately
one hour and sixteen minutes.
The judge returned at approximately 12:39 pm. See J.A. 197. 3 He spoke with
Sweeney off the record and asked if he wanted to proceed with eleven jurors and whether
3
The record provided by the parties includes pages of a trial transcript that is
excerpted in such a way that this conversation with Sweeney, which appears to be off-the-
(Continued)
9
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 10 of 96
he thoroughly discussed this with his lawyer, to which Sweeney replied affirmatively. J.A.
201. The judge also explained that Sweeney was giving up his right to a twelve-person
jury, to which Sweeney again replied affirmatively. Id.; see also J.A. 89–90.
The court then brought the jury in at 12:41 pm. J.A. 201. The judge explained that
“the ability of the sheriff to take the other jurors out there today is non-existent. We might
be able to do it Monday, but I don’t think that’s realistic. We’ve already told this jury that
this is a four-day event and we’re already in day five.” J.A. 197. The judge then called
Juror No. 4 up to the bench and excused him. J.A. 198.
The judge then addressed the jury, telling them: “I’m going to excuse you for lunch
right now. I’ll ask you to please be back in one hour if you would. . . . [A]s I’ve excused
Juror Number 4 – once all 11 of you are present, then you may begin your deliberations
again.” J.A. 198–99. The judge never instructed the remaining eleven jurors to not
consider anything that Juror No. 4 had told them, nor anything else related to the potential
taint.
The eleven-member jury reached a verdict after deliberating for approximately one
hour and fifteen minutes. Opening Br. at 6; J.A. 204–214. Sweeney was convicted of
second-degree murder, attempted second-degree murder, two counts of attempted first-
degree murder, and four counts of use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of
record, begins mid-sentence; it is also unclear as to exactly when and in whose presence
this conversation occurred. See J.A. 201; see also J.A. 197. The facts above include that
which is reflected in the transcript.
10
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 11 of 96
violence. J.A. 356. 4 He was sentenced to two consecutive terms of life imprisonment plus
thirty years. Id.
II.
After his conviction, Sweeney filed a direct appeal with the Maryland Court of
Special Appeals. That court affirmed his conviction and sentence. J.A. 487. He then filed
a petition for a writ of certiorari in the Maryland Court of Appeals, which denied his
petition. Id.
Sweeney then filed a pro se petition for postconviction relief in the Maryland Circuit
Court, in which he argued that his trial counsel, Nunzio, was ineffective under Strickland
v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984), for: (1) failing to object to Juror No. 4 being allowed
back into the deliberation room after advising the court he had visited the crime scene; (2)
striking Juror No. 4 without his knowledge or consent; and (3) failing to explain to
Sweeney his rights to twelve jurors or to declare a mistrial. J.A. 378–86. Sweeney was
later appointed counsel who filed two supplements to the petition, raising additional claims
for ineffective assistance of counsel, including some unrelated to Juror No. 4’s
unauthorized crime scene visit. J.A. 387–430 (Suppl. to Pet. for Post Conviction Relief);
J.A. 431–42 (Second Suppl. to Pet. for Post Conviction Relief).
One of Sweeney’s claims read: “Trial counsel rendered deficient assistance by
choosing to proceed with an eleven[-]member jury without requesting voir dire of the
4
Sweeney was found not guilty of first-degree murder and attempted murder, and
the jury did not reach a verdict on any of the three counts of first-degree assault. J.A. 280.
11
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 12 of 96
remaining jurors regarding Juror Number 4’s independent investigation of the crime scene
or failing to request a mistrial.” J.A. 432. It continued that “[i]t is incumbent upon
competent counsel to ascertain the impact Juror Number 4’s improper conduct had on the
rest of the jury,” but Nunzio instead “made the decision to move forward with an 11
member jury, essentially in a vacuum, without the information necessary to determine if
that was sound strategy.” J.A. 437. Sweeney also expressed concern with the court’s
excusal of Juror No. 4 to the jury lounge with the other jurors and the court’s failure to
instruct the other eleven jurors to not consider anything Juror No. 4 had told them. See
J.A. 433–35. After briefing was filed, the Maryland Circuit Court held a postconviction
review hearing. See J.A. 44.
At the hearing, Nunzio testified that when Juror No. 4 notified the court that he had
gone to the crime scene the night before, it “[a]bsolutely” caused him some concern
because the juror “wasn’t paying attention to the Court rules” and “he went outside what
the Court instructed him to do.” J.A. 75. He testified that he “[c]ertainly” had concern
about what Juror No. 4 had seen at the crime scene, particularly as some of the key issues
at trial concerned the distance of certain buildings, the light at the scene at night, and the
vantage point. J.A. 75–77. Nunzio admitted that he did not know what Juror No. 4 did at
the scene, nor what the witnesses that Juror No. 4 saw were doing. J.A. 78.
Nunzio also testified as to the three options he presented Sweeney: (1) take all the
jurors to the crime scene, (2) proceed with eleven jurors, or (3) move for a mistrial, the
third of which was not reflected in the trial transcript. J.A. 80–81. He explained that he
discussed these options with Sweeney and that he “did defer to [Sweeney],” but that it was
12
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 13 of 96
“almost a collective decision because the theory was if we had a juror who wasn’t following
the instructions from the Court as to admonishing them from doing an investigation, we
didn’t know if we could trust him to follow the rule of law as it was instructed by [the trial
court judge].” J.A. 90. As for the option of a mistrial, Nunzio stated that:
If I had to retry the case, I’d retry it. We talked about the jury pretty much
extensively. Things were very good. The jurors seemed to be receptive as
you watched them day after day. They were very attentive. There were things
that came out of the trial that we both thought were very positive as far as the
[alternative theory implicating Walls elicited during cross-examination.] So
the theory was is [sic] that was going very well. Okay? And quite frankly, it
was a shock to the prosecutor and to the ladies and gentleman of the jury. We
were making headway. . . . But yes, we contemplated a mistrial. I don’t know
if we would have been able to replicate that scenario again, but we did talk
about mistrial, but the theory was, and Sweeney acknowledged, we had made
a lot of headway in the courtroom itself.
J.A. 90–93. Nunzio was asked if he had any concerns about reducing the number of jurors
needed to reach a unanimous decision of conviction. J.A. 94. He answered, “do you think
about it? Absolutely. But in this case, again, we were making headway inside the
courtroom.” Id. He discussed how on cross-examination he had highlighted
inconsistencies between government witnesses. J.A. 94–95.
Government counsel asked Nunzio, “there was nothing that [Juror No. 4] said that
would lead you to believe that his observations had in any way tainted the other jury
members, was there?,” to which he answered, “[t]hat’s correct. . . . [I]f memory serves me,
I mean [the trial court judge] asked the questions (indiscernible) and so forth. Memory
serves me that the jury was not tainted as to what he said or did. . . . [T]here was no present-
sense impression at that time and even until today that the jury was contaminated. I just –
that’s the way I feel and that’s the way I did feel.” J.A. 111–12; see also J.A. 117. When
13
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 14 of 96
asked to confirm that Juror No. 4 “did tell at least some jurors that he went to the scene”
and “did in fact have some conversation with the jury,” Nunzio answered that he would
“defer to the record,” referring to the trial transcript. J.A. 118.
After the hearing, the Maryland Circuit Court denied Sweeney’s petition for
postconviction relief. J.A. 452–53. That court explained that Nunzio “discussed options
with [Sweeney] on how to proceed,” and that Sweeney “failed to produce evidence that
Trial Counsel included the option to voir dire sua sponte the remaining eleven jurors,
failing to meet his burden.” Id. Sweeney then filed an application for leave to appeal in
the Maryland Court of Special Appeals, see J.A. 455–81 (Appl. for Leave to Appeal Denial
of Pet. for Post Conviction Relief), which denied his application per curiam. J.A. 482–84.
That court also denied his petition for writ of certiorari. See J.A. 487.
Finally, with appointed counsel, Sweeney filed a petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in
the United States District Court for the District of Maryland. See generally J.A. 4–39
(§ 2254 Petition). In that petition, Sweeney argued that “[b]oth the court and Petitioner’s
attorney, Mr. Justin Nunzio, had a legal duty to determine the extent to which Juror Number
4 had been tainted by his visit to the crime scene and the other jurors had been tainted by
their discussions with Juror Number 4.” J.A. 7. He stated that Nunzio should have
requested a voir dire of the entire jury, as this was “a protection against juror bias to which
the petitioner had a right,” and, furthermore, that this was “a protection that the court had
an absolute duty on its own to provide.” J.A. 22. Sweeney explained that the “trial court
acted contrary to” what it was required to do when the judge (1) “failed to ask Juror Number
4 about the nature, the time, the duration, or the circumstances of the visit”; (2) did not
14
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 15 of 96
“hold a hearing to determine what Juror Number 4 had shared with the other jurors about
the visit, or even how long he had spoken with the other jurors about that visit”; and (3)
“allowed Juror Number Four to be part of the jury’s deliberations for over an hour in the
jury lounge.” J.A. 24. He continued that these actions by the trial court judge––and
Nunzio’s failure to object to any of them––forced Sweeney to “decide . . . whether to waive
[his] right to a twelve member jury[] without [ ] having the information reasonably
necessary to make an informed decision,” causing an injurious effect on his trial. Id.
Additionally, he argued that the court’s failure to conduct an inquiry of the jurors “denied
[him] the opportunity to determine the extent of those injuries.” Id.
The district court denied Sweeney’s petition. It stated that Sweeney had “failed to
bring a claim, either on direct appeal or in his application for postconviction review, that
the trial court deprived him of the right to an impartial jury when it did not conduct a proper
Remmer hearing,” and he “thus couched his claim in his postconviction application and in
the instant habeas Petition as ineffective assistance of counsel for failing to object to the
trial court’s failure to hold a proper Remmer hearing.” J.A. 493 (referring to Remmer v.
United States, 347 U.S. 227 (1954)). The court ultimately held that “the Circuit Court’s
application of Strickland was neither contrary to, nor an unreasonable application of,
federal law and Sweeney’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim fails.” J.A. 496.
Sweeney then appealed to this Court. He again argued that “Sweeney’s trial counsel
rendered deficient performance under Strickland by failing to assert [his] right to a hearing
and voir dire of the entire jury panel.” Opening Br. at 13. He contended that “Sweeney’s
15
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 16 of 96
right to a fair and impartial jury deliberations [sic] . . . was [ ] compromised by counsel’s
deficient performance.” Id.
III.
Generally speaking, “a state prisoner’s federal habeas petition should be dismissed
if the prisoner has not exhausted available state remedies as to any of his federal claims.”
Coleman v. Thompson, 501 U.S. 722, 731 (1991); see also 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1). But in
some cases, it may be appropriate for courts to consider certain issues that have not been
properly exhausted, and even do so sua sponte. The Supreme Court has explained that
exhaustion “is not rigid and inflexible; [ ] courts may deviate from it and grant relief in
special circumstances.” Frisbie v. Collins, 342 U.S. 519, 521 (1952). As for acting sua
sponte, courts have done so to address waiver of defenses or procedural defects, among
other issues. For example, “if a full trial has been held in the district court and it is evident
that a miscarriage of justice has occurred, it may [ ] be appropriate for the court of appeals
to hold that the nonexhaustion defense has been waived in order to avoid unnecessary delay
in granting relief that is plainly warranted.” Granberry v. Grer, 481 U.S. 129, 135 (1987);
cf. Wood v. Milyard, 566 U.S. 463, 472 (2012) (explaining that courts can consider sua
sponte the timeliness of a habeas petition).
To be clear, “a federal court does not have carte blanche to depart from the principle
of party presentation basic to our adversary system,” id., nor to create a workaround for
exhaustion. But the court should “determine whether the interests of justice would be better
served” by addressing underlying issues. Granberry, 481 U.S. at 136. If there exist
16
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 17 of 96
“special circumstances [that] require[] prompt federal intervention” in a particular case, the
court should be able to act. Frisbie, 342 U.S. at 522. “Whether such circumstances exist
calls for a factual appraisal by the court in each special situation,” as “special
circumstances” will be “peculiar to th[e] case, [and] may never come up again.” Id. at
521–22.
The special circumstances of this case, which will likely never arise again, 5 require
our consideration of an issue not cleanly articulated and exhausted by Sweeney.
This case is extraordinary in its significant breakdown of the judicial process. It
began with Juror No. 4 taking an unauthorized visit to the crime scene the night before
deliberations began, in direct violation of the court’s orders, to get a more accurate view of
the scene. Juror No. 4 then told the other jurors about his visit. The trial court judge failed
to sufficiently inquire about Juror No. 4’s visit to the crime scene. The judge failed to ask
at all about what Juror No. 4 had told the other jurors. And the judge failed to speak to any
of the other jurors themselves. Despite this, the judge allowed Juror No. 4 to return to the
jury lounge with the other jurors for over an hour, with no instruction that they not
deliberate. After ultimately excusing Juror No. 4, the judge never instructed the remaining
eleven jurors that they were not to consider anything Juror No. 4 had told them. As for
Sweeney’s attorney, Nunzio, he likewise failed to sufficiently inquire into the jury’s
5
It would be a damning indictment of this nation’s legal system if trials are being
so mishandled in more than the extremely rare case. Cf. Fields v. Fed. Bur. of Prisons, 109
F.4th 264, 272 (4th Cir. 2024) (“If the officers’ conduct alleged here is a frequent
occurrence in prisons across the country, it would be a telling indictment of the American
carceral system.”).
17
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 18 of 96
impartiality. Nunzio also failed to demand that the court conduct the hearing to which
Sweeney was entitled in order to probe into the jury taint. And instead of moving for a
mistrial, Nunzio chose to proceed with an eleven-person jury in a murder trial, where he
had presented no evidence nor witnesses, and without any information about the potential
taint of those eleven jurors. As a result, Sweeney was quickly convicted by an eleven-
person jury and is now serving life in prison. This breakdown—from juror, to judge, to
defense attorney—deprived Sweeney of his constitutional rights. Like a game of Jenga,
one or two pieces can often be removed without causing collapse, but when multiple pieces
fundamental to our trial system are pulled out from under a criminal defendant, justice
topples entirely.
As previewed above, the problems in this case extend beyond the ineffective
assistance of counsel, which is how Sweeney has articulated his claim, because many were
caused by the judge’s own failures to ensure the impartiality of Sweeney’s jury. Sweeney
identified many of these failures throughout his various filings at the state and federal court
levels. For example, he indicated that the judge should have: held an evidentiary hearing
into what Juror No. 4 had seen during his crime scene visit and what he had shared with
the other jurors, see, e.g., J.A. 7, 24 (§ 2254 Petition); conducted an inquiry of the other
eleven jurors, see, e.g., J.A. 22 (§ 2254 Petition), 436–37 (Second Suppl. to Pet. for Post
Conviction Relief); ensured that Juror No. 4 could not convey additional information to the
other jurors by not allowing him to recess with them in the jury lounge, see, e.g., J.A. 24,
33 (§ 2254 Petition), 435 (Second Suppl. to Pet. for Post Conviction Relief); and instructed
the remaining eleven jurors not to consider anything Juror No. 4 had told them, see, e.g.,
18
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 19 of 96
J.A. 435 (Second Suppl. to Pet. for Post Conviction Relief). Nunzio’s deficiency in
representation was exacerbated by the judge’s own shortcomings in failing to protect
Sweeney’s constitutional rights.
Due to the combination of extraordinary failures from juror to judge to attorney,
these “special circumstances . . . require[] prompt federal intervention” where it may
otherwise be unavailable. Frisbie, 342 U.S. at 522. It is this multitude of failures that,
together, take this case beyond our traditional habeas review.
IV.
At our nation’s founding, the right to a trial by jury was, along with representative
government, considered “the heart and lungs” of liberty. Letter from Clarendon to W. Pym
(Jan. 27, 1766), reprinted in 1 Papers of John Adams 169 (R. Taylor ed. 1977). This right
was paramount to the Framers and chief among the protections afforded by state
constitutions. See Erlinger v. United States, 602 U.S. 821, 829–30 (2024) (citations
omitted). James Madison, who drafted the Bill of Rights, “described protections for the
jury trial right as among ‘the most valuable’ that appear in ‘the whole list.’” Id. at 830
(citing 1 Annals of Cong. 755 (1789)).
The Sixth Amendment and due process under the Fourteenth Amendment guarantee
a criminal defendant the right to a trial by an impartial jury. U.S. Const. amend. VI; Irvin
v. Dowd, 366 U.S. 717, 722 (1961). “No right touches more the heart of fairness in a trial.”
Stockton v. Virginia, 852 F.2d 740, 743 (4th Cir. 1988). The Sixth Amendment also affords
a confrontation right that requires “a jury’s verdict [ ] be based upon the evidence
19
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 20 of 96
developed at the trial,” which “shall come from the witness stand in a public courtroom
where there is full judicial protection of the defendant’s right[s].” Turner v. Louisiana,
379 U.S. 466, 472–73 (1965) (quotation omitted). This right “goes to the fundamental
integrity of all that is embraced in the constitutional concept of trial by jury.” Id. at 472
(quotation omitted). Together, these rights ensure that a verdict comes from the unanimous
decision of “indifferent” jurors based solely upon only the evidence developed at trial.
Irvin, 366 U.S. at 722.
“When a serious, non-speculative question of juror impartiality arises during trial,
the [trial court judge] must determine whether the affected jurors remain fair and
impartial.” United States v. Smith, 919 F.3d 825, 834 (4th Cir. 2019); see also United
States v. Thompson, 744 F.2d 1065, 1068 (4th Cir. 1984) (“When a question is raised . . .
about whether a juror can fulfill his duties with an open mind, the [trial] court must
determine that the juror is competent to proceed before continuing with the trial.”). “A
trial judge must be ever watchful to prevent prejudicial occurrences.” Gardner v. Ozmint,
511 F.3d 420, 424 (4th Cir. 2007) (citation and quotation omitted).
External influence on a juror triggers additional safeguards. “It is clearly established
under Supreme Court precedent that an external influence affecting a jury’s deliberations
violates a criminal defendant’s right to an impartial jury.” Barnes v. Joyner, 751 F.3d 229,
240 (4th Cir. 2014); see also J.A. 23, 25 (§ 2254 Petition citing this case). “‘[U]nder clearly
established Supreme Court case law,’ an influence on a jury’s deliberative process is
external if it is either ‘extraneous prejudicial information; i.e., information that was not
admitted into evidence but nevertheless bears on a fact at issue in the case,’ or if it is ‘an
20
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 21 of 96
outside influence upon the partiality of the jury, such as private communication, contact,
or tampering . . . with a juror.’” Barnes, 751 F.3d at 245 (quoting Robinson v. Polk, 438
F.3d 350, 363 (4th Cir. 2006)). The distinction between external and internal influences is
important, as only external influences “necessitate a thorough judicial inquiry.” Wolfe v.
Johnson, 565 F.3d 140, 161 (4th Cir. 2009). In Remmer v. United States, the Supreme
Court “clearly established . . . a defendant’s entitlement to an evidentiary hearing” to
address allegations of external jury influence, and “[p]ost-Remmer Supreme Court case law
has confirmed that due process requires a hearing to alleviate concerns of juror partiality.”
Barnes, 751 F.3d at 242–43; see also Smith v. Phillips, 455 U.S. 209, 215 (1982) (“This
Court has long held that the remedy for allegations of juror partiality is a hearing in which
the defendant has the opportunity to prove actual bias.”). The Supreme Court has explained
that “[d]ue process means a jury capable and willing to decide the case solely on the
evidence before it, and a trial judge ever watchful to prevent prejudicial occurrences and
to determine the effect of such occurrences when they happen. Such determinations may
properly be made at a hearing like that ordered in Remmer.” Smith, 455 U.S. at 217; see
also Opening Br. at 20 n.2 (quoting the same). The hearing can occur at any time when
the potential taint is discovered, during trial or post-verdict. See Barnes, 751 F.3d at 244
(citing Ladd v. State of S.C., 415 F.2d 870, 873 (4th Cir. 1969)).
The Sixth Amendment also guarantees that “the accused shall enjoy the right . . . to
have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.” U.S. Const. amend VI. This “right to
counsel exists, and is needed, in order to protect the fundamental right to a fair trial.”
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 684. Furthermore, the Supreme Court has recognized that “the right
21
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 22 of 96
to counsel is the right to the effective assistance of counsel.” McMann v. Richardson, 397
U.S. 759, 771 n.14 (1970).
V.
This case presents an extraordinary confluence of events, in which the rights central
to our jury trial system––revered by the Framers and enshrined in the Bill of Rights––were
denied to Sweeney.
A.
First, the trial court judge neglected his duty to prevent prejudicial occurrences by
failing to adequately question Juror No. 4 and failing to inquire at all into the potential
impartiality of the other eleven jurors.
The trial court judge was given a note indicating that Juror No. 4 had visited the
crime scene the night before deliberations began “to walk through the scene,” where he
saw “a couple of [government] witnesses.” J.A. 190. This clearly presented a non-
speculative question of Juror No. 4’s impartiality. See Smith, 919 F.3d at 834. Beyond the
obvious concerns, there is case law from this Court intimating that a juror’s unauthorized
visit to a crime scene can violate a defendant’s constitutional rights to an impartial trial and
confrontation. Sherman v. Smith, 89 F.3d 1134, 1136–38 (4th Cir. 1996). 6
6
In Sherman, we stated: “[Defendant] contends that [the] juror[ ]’s unsupervised
visit to the crime scene violated his Sixth Amendment rights to confront and cross-examine
witnesses against him and to be judged by an impartial jury. We shall assume for purposes
of argument that [the] juror[ ]’s site visit amounted to a constitutional violation of
[defendant’s] rights.” 89 F.3d at 1137.
22
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 23 of 96
Thus, based on the information in the jury note, the judge was obligated to
“determine whether [Juror No. 4] remain[ed] fair and impartial.” Smith, 919 F.3d at 834.
We have made clear that “although ordinarily the question as to whether a juror is fair and
impartial is a matter addressed to the discretion of the trial judge,” still “the judge is bound
either to make or to permit such inquiries to be made as will enable him in the exercise of
his discretion to exclude from the jury persons who . . . are not fair and impartial jurors
within the contemplation of the law. This is true in all cases.” Neal v. United States, 22
F.2d 52, 53 (4th Cir. 1927). Therefore, while it is true that a trial judge has “ample leeway
to formulate the questions to be asked” and “broad discretion in evaluating the significance
of potential juror bias,” Smith, 919 F.3d at 834–35, this leeway presupposes that the judge
formulates some questions, as he is “bound” to do, see Neal, 22 F.2d at 53, and does
evaluate the significance of the bias—neither of which occurred here.
All the judge said to Juror No. 4 was “Tell me what happened,” and then “Is this in
any way going to affect your –”. J.A. 190–91. To begin, neither of these are formulated
as questions: the first is an open-ended directive, and the second was cut off. Additionally,
the judge did not probe into Juror No. 4’s responses at all. To “Tell me what happened,”
Juror No. 4 gave a very brief reply, indicating that he “got out and went by the scene” to
“see . . . an actual visual” because he “see[s] topographical views all the time” and
considers them to “not give an accurate [view].” J.A. 190–91. Juror No. 4’s short
statement provoked numerous potential follow-up questions––e.g., how long were you at
the scene, what time of day did you go there, what buildings did you walk by, which
witnesses did you see, what is your familiarity with topographical views, what did you
23
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 24 of 96
learn from the actual visual, did it confirm or call into question what was presented at
trial—none of which the judge pursued. Juror No. 4’s reference to the topographical views,
like the diagram presented at trial, indicate that he had doubts that he wanted to resolve
through a visit to the crime scene––doubts to which Sweeney was entitled unless the
government met its burden based solely on the evidence presented at trial. Despite the
paucity of the information that the judge elicited from Juror No. 4, the judge only asked,
“Is this in any way going to affect your –” before being cut off by Juror No. 4, who replied,
“No.” J.A. 191. The judge then told Juror No. 4 to return to his seat, content with Juror
No. 4’s responses.
In addition to the question of Juror No. 4’s impartiality, the judge was also presented
with a non-speculative question of the other jurors’ impartiality: Through the jury note,
the judge knew that Juror No. 4 had mentioned his visit to other jurors. But the judge failed
to ask any questions of Juror No. 4 about his conversation with the other jurors. He did
not ask what information Juror No. 4 told the other jurors, to whom he relayed that
information, what the other jurors’ reactions were, whether the other jurors had any
questions, who told him he should inform the judge, et cetera. Additionally, although the
jury had been deliberating for thirty-five minutes before the note was delivered and fifty-
eight minutes before the jury was brought into the courtroom, the judge did not inquire as
to how long any conversation about Juror No. 4’s visit lasted.
Furthermore, the judge did not conduct any inquiry whatsoever of any of the other
eleven jurors. When such a situation arises, judges typically “question[] each juror
individually” to determine whether any are biased. Smith, 919 F.3d at 834. For example,
24
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 25 of 96
after the jury foreperson in a narcotics case informed the judge that a juror “conduct[ed] an
independent investigation of certain evidence, which had already been admitted at trial,
and reported her findings to the other members of the jury,” the judge “questioned every
member of the jury individually,” and, more specifically, “extensively questioned [them]
to determine if the extraneous material which came before the jury had tainted or prejudiced
any of them.” United States v. Seeright, 978 F.2d 842, 849–50 (4th Cir. 1992). In contrast
here, the trial court judge did not ask questions of any of the other eleven jurors, such that
he was not even in a position to determine whether they had been tainted or prejudiced by
the information reported by Juror No. 4. To put it plainly, the judge did nothing to find out
whether the other eleven “affected jurors remain fair and impartial.” Smith, 919 F.3d at
834. Instead, without any questioning, the other eleven remained on the jury to deliberate
and ultimately convict Sweeney.
The trial court judge abdicated his responsibility to be “ever watchful to prevent
prejudicial occurrences.” Gardner, 511 F.3d at 424. Not only did he not ask sufficient
questions of Juror No. 4, but he did not ask any questions to determine whether any of the
other eleven jurors were no longer impartial. These failures encroached on Sweeney’s
right to an impartial jury and confrontation right under the Sixth and Fourteenth
Amendments.
B.
Beyond this general responsibility to ensure an unprejudiced jury, because Juror No.
4’s crime scene visit was an external influence, it triggered Sweeney’s right to an
evidentiary hearing. The trial court judge did not conduct such a hearing.
25
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 26 of 96
“[T]he Supreme Court has never provided a formula for deciding whether a
particular influence upon the jury was external or internal,” but it has indicated that “the
distinction . . . is [] ‘based on the nature of the [influence].’” Robinson, 438 F.3d at 362
(quoting Tanner v. United States, 483 U.S. 107, 117 (1987)). However, there is clearly
established Supreme Court case law indicating that both (1) extraneous prejudicial
information and (2) outside influence upon the partiality of the jury are external influences.
Barnes, 751 F.3d at 245. As for the first, extraneous prejudicial information is
“information that was not admitted into evidence but nevertheless bears on a fact at issue
in the case.” Robinson, 438 F.3d at 363.
Here, Juror No. 4’s visit to the crime scene constitutes extraneous prejudicial
information. He went to the scene to get “an actual visual” that he considered “better” than
the “topographical view[]” presented at trial, J.A. 190, and that visual bears on facts at
issue in the case––particularly where vantage point, the amount of artificial light at night,
and the distance of certain buildings were key issues at trial, and where the government
had published a diagram of the crime scene to the jury. J.A. 76–77, 183; see also J.A. 30
(§ 2254 Petition). As Sweeney argued to the district court, “Juror Number 4’s personal
observation of the crime scene would have had to have affected his views on these issues.”
J.A. 31 (§ 2254 Petition). This information is quite different from that which has been
deemed an internal influence, such as a juror reading an “eye for an eye” Bible passage
during deliberations, Robinson, 438 F.3d at 358–63, or a juror using drugs and alcohol
during trial, Tanner, 483 U.S. at 117. In those instances, the jurors’ actions had no bearing
on any facts relevant to the trial but were instead “internal to the deliberation process.”
26
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 27 of 96
Robinson, 438 F.3d at 363. In contrast, Juror No. 4’s crime scene visit and the information
he gleaned is properly considered extraneous information because “it was not revealed to
the jury during trial, and it is not the kind of general information that jurors bring with them
into deliberations.” Fullwood v. Lee, 290 F.3d 663, 682 (4th Cir. 2002).
In such a case, where “the danger is not one of juror impairment or predisposition,”
Stockton, 852 F.2d at 744, but rather the effect of the extraneous prejudicial information,
Sweeney is entitled to an evidentiary hearing like that in Remmer, see United States v.
Sandalis, 14 F. App’x 287, 289 (4th Cir. 2001) (“when a party makes a threshold showing
that improper external influences came to bear on the decision-making process of a juror,
an evidentiary hearing on juror bias . . . is required”) (citing Remmer, 347 U.S. at 229–30).
The potential impact of the extraneous prejudicial information on as many as all twelve
jurors makes this even more necessary. “This potentially widespread taint of the jury
compelled the district court to conduct a Remmer hearing.” United States v. Johnson, 954
F.3d 174, 181 (4th Cir. 2020). But no such hearing was conducted.
Assuming arguendo that the colloquy of Juror No. 4 could constitute such a hearing,
it fell far short of what was required. A trial “court’s management of th[e] incident” at
such a hearing must be “both procedurally and substantively” sound. Id. at 180.
Procedurally speaking, the judge has a responsibility to question all potentially affected
jurors himself. See id. at 180–81. The judge here fell short of this procedural requirement
by first failing to ask Juror No. 4 about what information he had relayed to the other eleven
jurors, and then failing to conduct any inquiry of the other eleven jurors. But “[w]ithout
questioning each juror individually, the district court could not know whether any
27
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 28 of 96
remaining jurors were prejudiced by [Juror No. 4’s crime scene visit], even if those jurors
had not witnessed [the scene themselves].” Id. at 181. Furthermore, a court “confronted
with a credible allegation of an improper external contact” may not rely on third-party
information to assuage any concerns about said contact. Id. at 180. But Nunzio’s question,
“if you were to go into deliberations, would you be able to deliberate based upon the facts
here as opposed to what . . . you saw?” prompted Juror No. 4 to respond for himself and
on behalf of the other jurors, saying that “they would have no problem with basing their
decision[] off of the evidence which was presented in the case.” J.A. 192. Not only did
the judge fail to elicit any such information himself, but the information about the other
eleven jurors’ alleged impartiality was given by a third party, Juror No. 4.
Substantively, the court cannot just “engage[] in an abbreviated consideration of
[Juror No. 4’s] allegation.” Johnson, 954 F.3d at 180–81. Rather, “the entire picture
should be explored.” Remmer v. United States, 350 U.S. 377, 379 (1956). In a case where
a juror reported that members of the jury were being photographed by defendants’
associates, this Court held that “the court’s attention to the question whether the reported
incident, in fact, had occurred was only the beginning of the inquiry,” and the judge’s
failure to probe further was “substantively deficient.” Johnson, 954 F.3d at 180–81. Here,
the judge himself only said to Juror No. 4 “Tell me what happened,” J.A. 190, which should
have been just the beginning of the inquiry.
The trial court judge’s failure to conduct a proper evidentiary hearing, to which
Sweeney was entitled by law, deprived Sweeney of his constitutional rights under the Sixth
and Fourteenth Amendments.
28
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 29 of 96
C.
In addition to the judge’s failure to sufficiently inquire into the entire jury’s potential
prejudice, he also failed to take proper steps to mitigate or cure that taint and to more
broadly prioritize Sweeney’s right to a fair trial.
Even after learning that Juror No. 4 was tainted, the judge allowed him to return to
the jury lounge with the other eleven jurors while the court and counsel considered next
steps. See J.A. 86, 490–91. The judge acknowledged that he could separate the jurors in
twelve different rooms. J.A. 197. This would have avoided the possibility that Juror No.
4 would share additional information, worsening any taint of the other eleven, and also
ensure that the jury did not resume deliberations until the parties had resolved how to
proceed. However, the judge chose not to do so. Id. As Sweeney argued to the district
court, “the only explanation given for both tolerating and facilitating these contacts was
that the trial was running long and there was not time to have the jurors ‘waiting around’
or ‘in 12 different rooms.’” J.A. 33. Consequently, all jurors remained together for one
hour and sixteen minutes.
Beforehand, the judge had only briefly instructed Juror No. 4 to “not [ ] discuss
anything that happened during your tour of the crime scene. . . . Any experiences you had,
that’s not something I want you to share with anybody else.” J.A. 196. The judge provided
no further admonition or instruction. Significantly, this was an instruction given to a juror
already known to disobey court orders, and whom the judge recognized may continue to
disobey orders. Earlier, when Nunzio said, “[Juror No. 4] can’t help but tell them what he
saw,” the judge acknowledged, “I know.” J.A. 192.
29
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 30 of 96
Furthermore, the judge did not instruct any of the jurors to not deliberate during this
recess. See J.A. 86 (postconviction court judge stating, “I understand they were not
instructed.”). To the contrary, the judge acknowledged that they likely would talk about
the case, stating, “They can talk. I don’t know what else to do.” J.A. 196–97. Nunzio
chimed in, “While they are there they might as well do something,” and government
counsel added, “Instead of waiting around.” Id.; see also J.A. 18 (§ 2254 Petition
explaining the same). Their assumption that the jurors would talk included Juror No. 4, as
he was not instructed that he could not participate in any conversations. As mentioned
above, Juror No. 4 was only instructed to not share what happened when he visited the
scene, but not that he should withhold his opinions on the case, which had been impacted
by that visit. Not only did the trial court judge fail to determine the extent of the jury taint,
but he also failed to then separate the jury to prevent further contamination, nor did he
properly instruct them. It disturbs trust in the judicial process that the judge allowed Juror
No. 4 to return to the jury lounge with the rest of the jurors and that the jurors were
presumed to continue their discussions, absent any instruction otherwise, for well over one
hour.
During that recess, the court and parties discussed how to proceed. When a juror or
jurors are deemed tainted, a judge has various options for proceeding. This includes
replacing a biased juror with an alternate, or proceeding with a jury of less than twelve
people. Thompson, 744 F.2d at 1068. It is also within a judge’s discretion to declare a
mistrial based on a tainted juror, id., and a judge may declare a mistrial sua sponte if it is a
“manifest necessity,” United States v. Perez, 22 U.S. (9 Wheat.) 579, 580 (1824); see also
30
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 31 of 96
United States v. Sloan, 36 F.3d 386, 400 (4th Cir. 1994). While “a valid concern may be
the expense and loss of time associated with a mistrial,” “the court must give primary
attention to the possibility of a biased juror.” Thompson, 744 F.2d at 1068. A defendant’s
constitutional right to a fair and impartial trial must always take priority—and certainly
before the convenience of the court, counsel, and jury.
The only options reflected in the record––and which were offered by government
counsel and Nunzio––were bringing the entire jury to the crime scene or striking Juror No.
4. See J.A. 192–95. When Nunzio asked, “Does the Court have a preference?,” the judge
responded, “I don’t have a strong preference[].” J.A. 192. However, the judge went on to
express a preference against the crime scene visit, remarking, “I’m not sure that’s even
doable,” and that “it requires a whole lot of effort.” J.A. 193. Despite Nunzio reporting
that Sweeney “would very, very much prefer everybody see what he saw” at the crime
scene, and government counsel agreeing “I think that’s the best option,” the judge
ultimately determined that option was off the table. J.A. 194–95; see J.A. 19 (§ 2254
Petition explaining the same). He stated that “the ability of the sheriff to take the other
jurors out there today is non-existent. We might be able to do it Monday, but I don’t think
that’s realistic. We’ve already told this jury that this is a four-day event and we’re already
in day five.” J.A. 197. The judge rejected the option that was preferred by both parties in
favor of finishing the case quickly––and that is exactly what happened, with the eleven-
member jury returning a verdict on eight counts after deliberating for only one hour and
fifteen minutes. See Opening Br. at 6; J.A. 204–214.
31
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 32 of 96
The trial court judge never even contemplated a mistrial. He never contemplated
replacing Juror No. 4 with an alternate, whom he had just excused earlier that day. See
J.A. 187–88. He also never contemplated probing further into the potential taint to better
determine whether a mistrial was a “manifest necessity.” In this way, he did not give his
“primary attention to the possibility of [ ] biased juror[s]” in the remaining eleven, as is
required, Thompson, 744 F.3d at 1068; rather, he seemed to prioritize expediency. While
the saying goes, “justice delayed is justice denied,” it is also true that justice rushed may
be no justice at all.
The trial court judge ultimately struck only Juror No. 4. But as Sweeney previously
argued to the Maryland Circuit Court, “[t]he same rationale that provided the basis for
removing Juror Number 4 applied equally to an unknown number of jurors with whom
Juror Number 4 spoke about his independent investigation.” J.A. 435.
A curative instruction to the remaining jurors might have helped mitigate any taint,
as juries are presumed to follow instructions. See United States v. St. Louis, 889 F.3d 145,
155 (4th Cir. 2018). But the trial court judge skipped over this bulwark, too. After
excusing Juror No. 4, the judge never instructed the remaining eleven jurors to not consider
what Juror No. 4 had told them. See J.A. 435 (arguing in Second Suppl. to Pet. for Post
Conviction Relief that “[a]lthough the court admonished Juror Number 4 to not further
discuss his conduct and whatever conclusions he drew as a result of his investigation, the
court did not likewise instruct the other jurors to refrain from discussing or considering
whatever Juror Number 4 told them.”) (emphasis in original); see also J.A. 462 (Appl. for
Leave to Appeal Denial of Pet. for Post Conviction Relief stating that “The remaining
32
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 33 of 96
jurors were not advised to not discuss the case or what they may have learned from Juror
Number 4.”). Accordingly, the eleven-person jury’s guilty verdict could have been based
on the information that Juror No. 4 had conveyed to them in the morning, which the judge
never inquired about, or the information discussed during the recess, both of which the
judge never instructed them not to consider.
The judge’s failure to investigate prejudice in the jury, conduct the hearing that
Remmer requires, consider a mistrial, and take steps to mitigate any potential further taint
significantly contributed to a breakdown of the judicial process in this case, such that
Sweeney was deprived of his constitutional rights.
D.
Next, Sweeney’s attorney rendered inadequate counsel by failing to sufficiently
inquire into the prejudice that had potentially infected the jury and then, uninformed,
choosing to proceed with an eleven-member jury.
For a criminal defendant to show that his right to the effective assistance of counsel
has been violated, he must establish both that his counsel’s performance was deficient, and
that the deficient performance prejudiced his defense. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687. As for
deficient performance, counsel’s conduct must “f[a]ll below an objective standard of
reasonableness.” Id. at 688. The Supreme Court has explained that “counsel has a duty to
make reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable decision that makes particular
investigations unnecessary.” Id. at 690–91. Here, Nunzio did not reasonably investigate
33
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 34 of 96
Juror No. 4’s taint nor the potential taint of the remaining eleven jurors; additionally, his
decision that further investigation was unnecessary was not objectively reasonable. 7
After the judge spoke ever so briefly with Juror No. 4, Nunzio asked permission to
pose questions to Juror No 4 himself. J.A. 191. But the questions he then asked were not
much more probative nor the responses revealing. Nunzio first asked, “Do any of the other
jurors know that you went there?”, to which Juror No. 4 responded, “They do. But they
stopped me . . . because they thought that I should . . . present what I just said to you all.”
J.A. 191. At this point, Nunzio could not reasonably decide that probing further into this
matter was unnecessary. He had only asked if any of the other jurors knew that Juror No.
4 went to the crime scene, and Juror No. 4’s response did not elucidate how many of the
other jurors knew––was it all of them, a few, or only one? Additionally, Juror No. 4’s
response indicating that “they” knew he went to the crime scene should have spurred
extensive additional inquiry: What did they know about him going there, what information
had he shared with them, and how did they react, for example. Instead, Nunzio’s next
question was, “[W]ould you be able to deliberate based upon the facts here as opposed to
what . . . you saw?” J.A. 191. Juror No. 4 then responded, “That is correct. I would have
no problem with basing my decision, and they would have no problem with basing their
7
See J.A. 437 (arguing in Second Suppl. to Pet. for Post Conviction Relief that “It
was incumbent upon competent counsel to ascertain the impact Juror Number 4’s improper
conduct had on the rest of the jury. Trial counsel made the decision to move forward with
an 11 member jury, essentially in a vacuum, without the information necessary to
determine if that was sound strategy.”).
34
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 35 of 96
decision, off of the evidence which was presented in the case.” J.A. 192. This answer is
troubling for a few reasons.
First, Juror No. 4’s response suggests that what he saw at the crime scene verified
what he had heard at trial from the government. It is reasonable to infer that Juror No. 4
expressed that he could “bas[e] [his] decision . . . off of the evidence which was presented
in the case” because his visit confirmed the evidence presented at trial––eyewitness
testimony and the diagram––all of which was government evidence. J.A. 192. Second,
Juror No. 4 was speaking not only for himself, but on behalf of the other jurors with respect
to their ability to be impartial. As Chief Justice Marshall explained, “[t]hose who try the
impartiality of a juror . . . ought to hear the statement made by [that juror].” Neal, 22 F.2d
at 54 (quotation omitted). It is unreasonable to make a decision about the other eleven
jurors’ potential taint based on a comment made by Juror No. 4, rather than by those eleven
jurors themselves. Finally, Juror No. 4’s remark indicates that he knew, or at least had
insight into, how the other jurors would proceed moving forward based on how they had
reacted to the information he shared.
But again, despite the obvious concerns, Nunzio did not ask any follow-up questions
and only said, “You know where I’m coming from?” J.A. 192. Juror No. 4 responded,
“Yes, sir.” J.A. 192. The inquiry then ended.
Shortly thereafter, when discussing potential options for moving forward, Nunzio
acknowledged that “[Juror No. 4] can’t help but tell them what he saw.” J.A. 192. Despite
this acknowledgment; based only on the scant, troubling responses from Juror No. 4; and
after a less than two-minute conversation with his client, who was facing life sentences in
35
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 36 of 96
a murder trial in which he had not presented any evidence; Nunzio informed the court that
he wished to bring all jurors to the crime scene and, if that was unfeasible, “I think” move
forward with eleven jurors. J.A. 195.
Nunzio––nor anyone else, judge or government counsel included––did not
contemplate a potential mistrial on the record. He did not present Sweeney with the option
of replacing Juror No. 4 with an alternate juror. He did not consider further inquiry into
Juror No. 4’s taint. He did not request the judge hold an evidentiary hearing like that in
Remmer, to which Sweeney was entitled. He did not ask to conduct an inquiry of the other
jurors as to what they had learned and whether they, too, were tainted. 8 At each of these
points, Nunzio failed to question the court’s error and failed to perform his role in the
judicial process as defense counsel; his error compounded that of the court. Nunzio chose
to instead proceed, in a vacuum, with a potentially-tainted eleven-person jury. This choice
was unreasonable.
As Justice Gorsuch has explained, “at the time of the [Sixth] Amendment’s adoption
and for most of our Nation’s history, the right to a trial by jury for serious criminal offenses
meant a trial before 12 members of the community—nothing less.” Khorrami v. Arizona,
143 S. Ct. 22, 23 (2022) (Gorsuch, J., dissenting from denial of cert.). The Federal Rules
of Criminal Procedure provide a right to a twelve-member jury, although a defendant can
8
See J.A. 435 (arguing in Second Suppl. to Pet. for Post Conviction Relief that “In
failing to request that the court voir dire the rest of the jury to ascertain precisely what Juror
Number 4 told them and to what extent they may have been influenced by this information,
before deciding to proceed with an 11 member jury, trial counsel rendered deficient
assistance that caused prejudice to Petitioner.”).
36
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 37 of 96
waive this right by giving knowing and intelligent consent in open court. United States v.
Fisher, 912 F.2d 728, 731 (4th Cir. 1990); Fed. R. Crim. P. 23(b). But waiving that right
should be undertaken with the utmost diligence and discernment. Studies have shown that
the risk of conviction rises as the size of the jury diminishes. See Ballew v. Georgia, 435
U.S. 223, 234 (1978) (citing statistical studies). Therefore, one could say that proceeding
with an eleven-person jury in any murder case––significantly, one where the defendant is
facing multiple life sentences, and where the defense did not present any evidence––is
questionable. Doubly so where there was no inquiry into whether those eleven jurors were
tainted. 9 No objectively reasonable lawyer would allow his client to waive his right to a
twelve-person jury in these circumstances without additional investigation.
Additionally, Sweeney’s waiver was arguably not knowing, as is required: As he
argued to the district court,“[w]hen [he] waived his right to a jury with twelve members,
he had no idea how Juror Number 4’s visit to the crime scene had affected that juror’s
perception of the case, what Juror Number 4 had told the other jurors about that visit, or
how extensively Juror Number 4 had sought to influence other jurors both before and after
the court had learned of Juror Number 4’s unauthorized visit,” J.A. 8, and, therefore,
“[w]ithout that information, the choice to waive [his] right to a jury of twelve . . . could
only be uninformed,” J.A. 36–37.
9
See J.A. 437 (arguing in Second Suppl. to Pet. for Post Conviction Relief that
“Trial counsel’s choosing to proceed with an 11 juror panel, in and of itself, posed a great
risk to Petitioner by reducing the number of unanimous votes necessary to convict him.
Electing to proceed in the absence of critical information that was readily available through
voir dire of the panel elevated that risk from strategic to blind.”).
37
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 38 of 96
Nunzio’s testimony at the postconviction review hearing only confirms the
deficiency of his performance. He testified that he “[c]ertainly” had concerns about what
Juror No. 4 had seen at the crime scene. J.A. 76. He also admitted that he did not know
what Juror No. 4 did at the scene, nor what the witnesses Juror No. 4 saw were doing. J.A.
78. Yet despite these concerns and lack of information, he did not question Juror No. 4 to
glean additional responses on these issues. Nunzio also admitted that he “[a]bsolutely”
thought about concerns with the decision to proceed with eleven jurors, reducing the
number needed to reach a unanimous decision. J.A. 94. His explanation for proceeding
with eleven, rather than moving for a mistrial, was that “[t]hings were very good,” he “had
made a lot of headway in the courtroom,” and “[t]he jurors seemed to be receptive as you
watched them day after day. They were very attentive.” J.A. 90–93. He continued that
“[t]here were things that came out of the trial that [he and Sweeney] both thought were
very positive,” including a theory elicited on cross-examination that implicated Walls by
challenging the angle of Sweeney’s position and the bullet wound. J.A. 90–92. But Nunzio
had put on no evidence. And his alternative theory was weakened by the testimony of other
government witnesses and the firearms examiner. It is unreasonable for a defense attorney
in a murder case to believe that things “were very positive” where he presented no
witnesses nor evidence, no matter how “receptive” or “attentive” the jurors seemed to be.
J.A. 90–92.
Also at the postconviction review hearing, Nunzio emphatically recalled that he did
not believe that the other eleven jurors were tainted, yet he testified inaccurately as to other
details, and equivocated on other questions. He stated that “[m]emory serves me that the
38
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 39 of 96
jury was not tainted as to what [Juror No. 4] said or did. . . . [T]here was no present-sense
impression at that time and even until today that the jury was contaminated.” J.A. 112.
But without having asked any questions of the other jurors nor any questions of Juror No.
4 regarding what he shared, how he could he be so sure that the jury was not contaminated?
As Sweeney puts it, “Nunzio’s claimed observations . . . were based on speculation.”
Opening Br. at 26. The certainty of Nunzio’s response is undermined by other statements
made at the hearing. Nunzio recalled incorrectly what Juror No. 4 had shared with the
court about his crime scene visit, stating, “If memory serves me, he drove by. I don’t know
if he conclusively said that there were the witness [sic]. I remember, he said he didn’t roll
down windows or anything and [the trial court] had elicited this if memory serves me, but
he just drove down the street, and that’s all he did.” J.A. 77. None of this is in the record,
and, in fact, some is directly controverted by the record. See J.A. 190 (Juror No. 4 went to
“walk through the scene,” he “got out and went by the scene,” and he saw “a couple of
witnesses”). After being presented with the jury note, Nunzio corrected himself, stating,
“He got there, got out, looked, no real action and went on.” J.A. 77–78. He then added, “I
remember [the trial judge] asked [Juror No. 4] extensively.” J.A. 78. This was certainly
not the case; instead, as discussed earlier, the judge posed one open-ended directive and
one question that was cut off by Juror No. 4’s interruption. How could Nunzio be so certain
that the jury was not contaminated if he was wrong about what Juror No. 4 had even done
at the crime scene and what Juror No. 4 had shared with the court and the parties?
His misremembering abounded elsewhere; Nunzio testified that the other jurors
were not in the courtroom while the judge conversed with Juror No. 4, which was
39
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 40 of 96
inaccurate and promptly corrected by Sweeney’s postconviction counsel. See J.A. 83–84.
Later, when asked to confirm that Juror No. 4 “did tell at least some jurors that he went to
the scene” and “did in fact have some conversation with the jury,” Nunzio’s initial response
was belied by the transcript, at which point he stated that he would “defer to the record.”
J.A. 117–18. Nunzio’s testimony at the postconviction review hearing cannot justify his
actions at trial.
While we must give “a heavy measure of deference to counsel’s judgments,” our
task remains that “a particular decision not to investigate must be directly assessed for
reasonableness in all the circumstances.” Strickland, 466 at 691. Here, giving Nunzio due
deference and in light of all the circumstances, it was unreasonable for him to fail to
investigate into the jury taint and instead decide, in a vacuum, not to move for a mistrial
but rather to proceed with eleven jurors. 10
10
It bears brief mention that Nunzio made other errors, including failing to object
to Juror No. 4 being sent back into the jury lounge with others during the recess, and failing
to request a curative instruction for the remaining eleven jurors when they resumed their
deliberations. See J.A. 36, 435.
Sweeney had raised several other claims before the Maryland Circuit Court
regarding Nunzio’s ineffective assistance of counsel, which he has since abandoned. These
were regarding Nunzio’s failure to impeach a government witness, failure to object to
government witnesses reading prior statements into evidence, failure to object or move to
strike testimony regarding Sweeney’s prior bad acts, failure to file a motion in limine to
prevent admission of a weapon that was irrelevant and prejudicial, failure to object to the
government’s improper remarks during opening and closing arguments, misstatement of
the government’s burden of proof during his closing argument, J.A. 401–429 (Suppl. to
Pet. for Post Conviction Relief), and failure to request voir dire of the jury regarding grand
jury transcripts that were sent back to the jury during their deliberations, J.A. 437–441
(Second Suppl. to Pet. for Post Conviction Relief).
40
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 41 of 96
As for the second Strickland prong, “the concept of prejudice is defined in different
ways depending on the context in which it appears.” Weaver v. Massachusetts, 582 U.S.
286, 300 (2017). “In the ordinary Strickland case, prejudice means ‘a reasonable
probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would
have been different.’” Id. (citing Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694). But in deciding Strickland
itself, the Supreme Court stated that it was not “establish[ing] mechanical rules,” and “the
ultimate focus of inquiry must be on the fundamental fairness of the proceeding whose
result is being challenged.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 696. That Court made clear that “[i]n
every case the court should be concerned with whether . . . 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.” Id. That is squarely what happened here: a breakdown
of the adversarial process.
Nunzio rendered representation to Sweeney that was far below what is objectively
reasonable and, as a result, Sweeney was convicted by an eleven-member jury that might
have been wholly prejudiced by information from Juror No. 4’s crime scene visit. This
deprived Sweeney of his Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel,
further undermining his right to a fair trial.
* * *
The breakdown of the judicial process––from Juror No. 4, to the trial court judge,
to defense counsel Nunzio—deprived Sweeney of his constitutional right to a trial before
a fair and impartial jury based solely on the evidence presented in the courtroom.
41
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 42 of 96
There can be no confidence that Sweeney was tried by indifferent jurors who were
unprejudiced by extraneous information. Due to the judge’s and Nunzio’s failings, the
record only reflects that the eleven jurors who ultimately convicted Sweeney were told
something about Juror No. 4’s visit to the crime scene. But not much more. There can also
be no confidence that the eleven-person jury found Sweeney guilty based on the evidence
developed at trial, as opposed to the unknown information conveyed by Juror No. 4. In
this way, the burden of proof was compromised, with any reasonable doubt created by the
eyewitness testimony potentially resolved by Juror No. 4’s visit and his discussions with
the other jurors. Furthermore, the unknown information conveyed by Juror No. 4 could
have been incorrect and was never tested by examination at trial. For example, as Sweeney
explained to the district court, because Juror No. 4’s crime scene visit was during a different
month than that during which the shooting happened, it could have “skewed Juror No. 4’s
perception of the lighting and vantage points issues that were being contested by the
defense at trial.” Opening Br. at 23; J.A. 31–32. Juror No. 4 may have relayed what he
did not know to be flawed information about the evening light to the other jurors, but “the
record is barren” due to the judge’s and Nunzio’s failure to ask adequate questions. J.A.
32. That failure also means that they gathered no information about how government
“witnesses appeared to Juror Number 4 outside of the courtroom, what they may have been
doing, or how Juror Number 4 characterized his observations of these witnesses to his
fellow jurors,” which he could have used to either call into question or bolster their
credibility. Id. The court and the parties then––and we today––are without any such detail.
Without this detail, and without much information at all about the scope and impact of
42
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 43 of 96
Juror No. 4’s visit to the crime scene on the rest of the jury, Sweeney’s conviction cannot
stand as fair.
VI.
We must next determine the warranted remedy. “The Supreme Court has [ ]
recognized that certain structural errors are so severe as to render a trial inherently unfair
and thus, should not be subject to harmless error analysis.” Sherman, 89 F.3d at 1138.
These errors involve “structural defects in the constitution of the trial mechanism” such
that “[w]ithout these basic protections, a criminal trial cannot reliably serve its function as
a vehicle for determination of guilt or innocence, and no criminal punishment may be
regarded as fundamentally fair.” Arizona v. Fulminante, 499 U.S. 279, 309–10 (citation
and quotation omitted). The Supreme Court has identified “at least three broad rationales”
for deeming an error structural. Weaver, 582 U.S. at 295.
First, an error may be structural “if the right at issue is not designed to protect the
defendant from erroneous conviction but instead protects some other interest.” Id. This is
present here: Sweeney’s right to a trial by an impartial jury and his confrontation right,
guaranteed by the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments, are based on founding-era principles
that a defendant must be tried by an indifferent jury of his peers based only on the evidence
presented.
Second, “an error has been deemed structural if the effects of the error are simply
too hard to measure,” or the “effect of the violation cannot be ascertained.” Id. (citation
and quotation omitted). This, too, is present here. The trial court judge and Nunzio’s
43
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 44 of 96
significant shortcomings made ascertaining the effects of their errors nearly impossible.
Because they failed to probe into whether any of the remaining eleven members of the jury
were tainted, one cannot discern the effect of any such potential taint: e.g., whether any
potential taint did in fact lead to Sweeney’s conviction, whether or how the outcome might
have differed had more than just Juror No. 4 been excused, whether or how the outcome
might have differed following a mistrial. Stated differently, the inability to prove that the
eleven-member jury was in fact tainted and whether that taint led to Sweeney’s conviction
is part and parcel of the fact that both the judge and Nunzio failed to make an inquiry of
those jurors in the first place. Cf. J.A. 24 (“[T]he court’s failure to voir dire the jurors in
the required manner has denied Petitioner the opportunity to determine the extent of those
injuries.”). And as this Court has explained, “[w]e simply cannot know what affect a
twelfth juror might have had on jury deliberations. Attempting to determine this would
involve pure speculation.” United States v. Cubelo, 343 F.3d 273, 281 (4th Cir. 2003).
Third, “an error has been deemed structural if the error always results in
fundamental unfairness,” which includes, for example, complete denial of counsel to an
indigent defendant, or a judge’s failure to give a reasonable doubt instruction. Weaver,
582 U.S. at 296. We need not discuss this third rationale. In its analysis, the Supreme
Court made “one point [ ] critical”: that this third category is not necessary for an error to
be deemed structural. Id. It also explained that “[i]n a particular case, more than one of
these rationales may be part of the explanation for why an error is deemed to be structural.”
Id. That is precisely what is before us now: both the first and second rationales capture
the failings in this case, which are thus properly considered structural errors.
44
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 45 of 96
The case before us is quite different from Sherman v. Smith, where this Court
applied harmless error review. 89 F.3d 1134. To begin, the errors before us now are the
confluence of extraordinary failings from juror, to judge, to attorney, rather than the single
error of a juror’s unauthorized visit at issue in Sherman. But even comparing the two for
their shared flaw, the case cannot be guiding. In Sherman, after being convicted, the
defendant moved for a new trial based on allegations of a juror’s unauthorized visit to the
crime scene. Id. at 1136. The trial judge held an evidentiary hearing and ultimately denied
the defendant’s motion. Id. On appeal, the defendant argued that the juror’s unauthorized
visit constituted structural error because it defied harmless error analysis. See id. at 1138.
This Court found that “we cannot conclude that one juror’s unauthorized site visit is
a structural error that renders every trial inherently unfair.” Id. at 1140; see also id. at 1138.
However, the Supreme Court has since clearly stated that “[a]n error can count as structural
even if the error does not lead to fundamental unfairness in every case.” Weaver, 582 U.S.
at 296; see also McCoy v. Louisiana, 584 U.S. 414, 427 (2018) (finding an error structural
“[u]nder at least the first two rationales”). As explained above, there are two additional
rationales that can deem an error structural––both of which are met in the present case.
We also found that the issue in Sherman was “amenable to the traditional tools of
harmless error analysis.” 89 F.3d at 1140. There, the trial judge held a post-trial hearing
during which the court elicited details about the juror’s visit: why he went to the crime
scene, what he saw, what he did. We explained that when conducting such an inquiry about
a juror’s unauthorized visit, “a court can look to the nature and extent of the juror’s activity
and assess how that activity fit into the context of the evidence presented at trial,” as well
45
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 46 of 96
as “consider whether the juror learned information that was merely cumulative of other
evidence or whether he unearthed new information not previously presented to the jury.”
Id. at 1139–40. That is exactly what the trial court judge did in Sherman, such that the
effect of the error could be assessed in the context of other evidence presented at trial. See
id. at 1138. Far from the case here. Instead, neither the trial court judge nor Nunzio
sufficiently probed into any of the aforementioned considerations of Juror No. 4 nor the
other jurors, and as a result, the “effect of the violation cannot be ascertained” because of
the nature of the error itself. Weaver, 582 U.S. at 295 (citation and quotation omitted).
Our prior decision in Sherman is inapposite to the case at hand for multiple reasons and
therefore does not limit our inquiry to harmless error. Instead, for the reasons explained
above, the myriad issues in Sweeney’s trial constitute structural error.
Because of the structural error at issue in this case that extends far beyond just
Nunzio’s ineffectiveness––instead, from juror, to judge, to attorney, this error infected the
entire judicial process and Sweeney’s right to a fair trial––and because “[t]he Sixth
Amendment requires more than appellate speculation about a hypothetical jury’s action,”
Sullivan v. Louisiana, 508 U.S. 275, 280 (1993), Sweeney is entitled to a new trial.
VII.
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s denial of Sweeney’s
petition and remand with instructions to issue a conditional order of release unless a new
trial is completed within a period determined at the district court’s discretion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS
46
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 47 of 96
QUATTLEBAUM, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
Jeremiah Antoine Sweeney’s appeal involves one, and only one, claim. He argues
the district court improperly denied his Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of
1996 (“AEDPA”) claim that the Maryland postconviction relief (“PCR”) court misapplied
Supreme Court law in denying him ineffective assistance of counsel relief. On that claim,
Sweeney contends his lawyer did not do enough to rule out the possibility that—contrary
to what he told the court and what the other jurors said in their note—the juror who went
to the crime scene contaminated one or more of the other jurors with information about his
visit. Because of that, Sweeney claims the Maryland PCR court improperly denied his
ineffective assistance of counsel claim. But he offered no evidence of any contamination.
Nor did Sweeney offer any evidence, let alone an argument, that if more investigation had
been done, he would not still have been convicted. So, on the only claim properly before
us—whether the state court misapplied the law in addressing Sweeney’s ineffective
assistance of counsel claim—this appeal should be straightforward. The Maryland PCR
court did not unreasonably apply clearly established law when it held that Sweeney’s
counsel was not deficient. And Sweeney did not show prejudice. Thus, Sweeney’s
ineffective assistance claim fails.
The majority’s treatment of that claim is perplexing. It does not address it at all until
page 33 of its 46-page unpublished opinion. And there, while concluding that Sweeney’s
lawyer, Justin Nunzio, acted unreasonably, the majority never cites—and certainly never
applies—AEDPA. For example, it never holds that no fairminded jurist could rule the way
the state PCR court did based on clearly established Supreme Court law. Likewise, it never
47
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 48 of 96
holds that had Sweeney’s lawyer measured up to the majority’s standards, there is a
reasonable probability that the trial would have turned out differently. The majority just
sidesteps the only claim Sweeney actually raised in state court, presented to the district
court, and appealed.
Instead, ignoring AEDPA’s exhaustion requirements and governing principles of
party presentation, the majority raises on its own, and then decides the case on, a totally
different ground from what Sweeney argued to the state courts, to the district court or to us
on appeal. According to the majority, the combination of the juror’s crime scene visit plus
the failure of both the trial judge and Sweeney’s lawyer to protect against contamination
structurally violated Sweeney’s Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury. Under that
reasoning, the majority concludes that it does not have to apply AEDPA. Nor does it have
to find prejudice. Things were so unfair, the majority says, that Sweeney gets a new trial.
What is the majority’s justification for deciding the appeal on issues neither
Sweeney nor his lawyer raised in his state court trial, his state court appeal, his state court
post-conviction relief proceedings, his federal habeas claim before the district court or his
appeal to us and that none of those prior courts addressed either? To the majority, it’s “the
special circumstances of this case.” Maj. Op at 17.
That alone is a problem. What’s the standard for this? It seems purely subjective.
Like beauty, special circumstances are in the eye of the beholder. Employing amorphous
concepts like “the special circumstances of this case” permits judges to disregard binding
precedent to reach preferred outcomes. And it gives no guidance to trial judges or litigants.
48
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 49 of 96
How are they supposed to know when to follow the law or when the circumstances are
special enough to deviate?
But more than that, the majority’s approach undermines our ordered system of
justice. That system requires that we follow AEDPA’s statutory requirements and Supreme
Court precedent. We are not free to scour the record for issues that we think are important
when the parties never raised them below and then dispense our subjective views of justice.
That, however, is exactly what the majority does. The moment this decision is issued, it is
untenable under binding Supreme Court precedent. 1 See United States v. Banks, 29 F.4th
168, 175 (4th Cir. 2022) (“Authority is untenable if its reasoning or holding is inconsistent
with a Supreme Court decision.”).
To explain my dissent, I first describe how current law requires that we affirm the
district court’s dismissal of Sweeney’s AEDPA claim arguing that the Maryland PCR court
misapplied Supreme Court law. After that, I point out my disagreements with the majority’s
conclusions about Sweeney’s counsel before explaining why the majority’s decision to
1
We should not be any less alarmed by the majority’s opinion just because it is
unpublished. While that of course means it has no precedential value, see Collins v. Pond
Creek Mining Co., 468 F.3d 213, 219 (4th Cir. 2006), lawyers and litigants sometimes cite
to unpublished opinions. See Melissa H. Weresh, The Unpublished, Non-Precedential
Decision: An Uncomfortable Legality?, 3 J. App. Prac. & Process 175, 175 (2001). As
Aesop taught long ago in The Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing, things can be more dangerous than
they appear. Aesop, The Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing, in Aesop’s Fables, Library of Congress,
https://perma.cc/JDE5-NSJ4. Just as wolves are dangerous even in sheep’s clothing,
deviating from requirements imposed by Congress, the Supreme Court and this Court is
problematic, even in an unpublished opinion.
49
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 50 of 96
raise and pursue claims not raised below or here, or even to the Maryland courts, is
improper.
I.
A. The Trial
A Maryland jury convicted Jeremiah Antoine Sweeney of second-degree murder,
use of a handgun in the commission of a felony or crime of violence, attempted second-
degree murder and attempted first-degree murder. The parties did not submit a complete
transcript of the trial court proceedings, but the Court of Special Appeals of Maryland
found these facts:
On April 10, 2010, the events which led to Robert Anderson’s death occurred
in the 2100 block of East Marshall Place in Landover, Maryland. That
afternoon, [Sweeney] got into an argument with Eric McDonald and accused
him of having stolen some marijuana which belonged to [Sweeney].
McDonald denied having stolen anything from [Sweeney] and the two
exchanged some profanities. Some time later, [Sweeney] walked to his
house, and then returned to where McDonald was visiting with friends.
[Sweeney] was holding a gun clip and announced: “I got my piece,” referring
to a firearm. Shortly thereafter, [they] yelled threats at each other for
approximately thirty minutes, during which [Sweeney] proclaimed: “I’m
going to kill somebody.” The heated exchange happened in the area around
house #2108 on the street, where David Walls lived. Upon seeing that
[Sweeney] had a handgun, Walls asked him to leave. [Sweeney] then turned
to walk up the street, inserting the clip into his gun as he did so. [Sweeney]
and McDonald had continued to yell at each other, and when [Sweeney]
reached the area in front of his house, he dared McDonald to “cross the gun
line.”
Walls then implored the young men in front of his house, including
Anderson, to come inside. At first the group did not comply, but when they
did begin to make their way toward Walls’s house, [Sweeney] fired his gun
once into the air, and then fired approximately five or six times in the
direction of McDonald and the other young men. Anderson was struck by a
50
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 51 of 96
bullet in the back of the head and fell to the ground; neighbors attempted to
render aid. [Sweeney] then paced around the area in front of his house before
getting into his red Cadillac and driving away.
J.A. 356–57. About an hour into the jury’s deliberations, the court received a note: “Juror
Number 4 went to the crime scene yesterday to walk through the scene and a couple of
witnesses were there. Is this okay? There was no interaction.” J.A. 190 (cleaned up). The
court summoned Juror Number 4 and asked him what happened. He explained:
I just got out and went by the scene, just basically the crime scene, Your
Honor. I just wanted to get a visual because I know—I see topographical
views all the time and I know that that does not give an accurate—well,
there’s a better way to get an accurate view, which is to see a visual, an actual
visual. And that’s all I did. I spoke to no one.
As a matter of fact, I spoke to no one, and no one saw me. But I did see, you
know, just a couple of witnesses that were, you know, that were there.
J.A. 190–91. The court asked if this would affect his verdict. He answered no. Sweeney’s
counsel, Justin Nunzio, asked if any of the other jurors knew that he visited the scene. Juror
Number 4 replied yes, “[b]ut they stopped me, too, because they thought that I should stop
talking and I present what I just said to you all.” J.A. 191. Nunzio and the prosecutor
inquired if the juror could limit his verdict to the evidence presented at trial without
considering the crime scene. He replied, “I would have no problem with basing my
decision, and they would have no problem basing their decision, off of the evidence which
was presented in the case.” J.A. 192.
Counsel then conferred with the court. Nunzio expressed concern that the juror
“can’t help but tell them what he saw.” J.A. 192. The prosecutor suggested having the
Sheriff’s Department arrange for the entire jury to visit the neighborhood. The court
51
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 52 of 96
expressed concern about the feasibility of this option but allowed Nunzio to discuss it with
Sweeney. Nunzio explained that Sweeney’s preference was for the jury to visit the scene,
and the prosecutor agreed that was “the best option.” J.A. 194. The court asked what
Sweeney wanted to do if the visit could not be arranged. Nunzio answered that he “would
probably just strike Juror Number 4.” J.A. 195. The prosecutor stated that he would not
object to that if a visit was not feasible.
The court summoned Juror Number 4 back to the bench and instructed him “not to
discuss anything that happened during your tour of the crime scene” while it considered
the matter further. J.A. 196. The court then dismissed the jury “to the jury lounge.” 2 J.A.
196.
After the jury left the courtroom, the court continued to confer with counsel about
Juror Number 4 and the other jurors:
THE COURT: They can talk. I don’t know what else to do.
MR. NUNZIO: He can’t be part of the process.
THE COURT: I told him not to be sharing any of these experiences.
MR. NUNZIO: Absolutely right. While they are there they might as well do
something.
[THE PROSECUTOR]: Instead of waiting around.
THE COURT: Unless I put them in 12 different rooms. Well, I have one more thing
to do and I will talk to the sheriff.
J.A. 196–97.
2
This is apparently distinct from the jury room.
52
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 53 of 96
After about a one-hour recess, the court returned to the bench and announced that a
visit to the scene was not feasible. The court then had the following colloquy with Sweeney:
THE COURT: . . . It’s my understanding, from your lawyer, that you’re agreeable
to us excusing Juror Number 4 and going forward with the remaining 11 jurors and
to let them make their decision.
Is that true?
[SWEENEY]: Yes.
THE COURT: Do you have any questions?
[SWEENEY]: No, sir.
THE COURT: Have you thoroughly discussed this with your lawyer? Is that what
you want to do?
[SWEENEY]: Yes.
THE COURT: Because you have a right to have 12 jurors decide your innocence or
guilt, and if you give it up then that’s exactly what we’re going to do and we’ll let
11 people decide your fate.
All right?
[SWEENEY] 3: Yes, sir.
J.A. 197, 201.
The court then excused Juror Number 4. The jury deliberated for two more hours
before returning its guilty verdict.
Nunzio moved for a new trial, arguing, among other things, that the juror
misconduct resulted in a miscarriage of justice because Sweeney was “left in a position to
3
The transcript attributes this statement to Juror Number 4, but the parties agree
that this is a transcription error.
53
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 54 of 96
choose between a mistrial, having all the jurors visit the crime scene (after the close of the
evidence) and going forward with 11 jurors.” J.A. 294. After the trial court denied that
motion, Sweeney appealed. But he did not raise the juror misconduct issue. The Maryland
Court of Special Appeals affirmed Sweeney’s convictions.
B. State Habeas Proceedings
Sweeney petitioned pro se for postconviction relief in Maryland state court, arguing
that Nunzio was ineffective for (1) failing to object to Juror Number 4’s being allowed
back into the deliberation room after he told the court he had visited the crime scene, (2)
“creat[ing] a conflict of interest when Counsel decided to strike Juror #4 without
petitioner’s consent,” and (3) “fail[ing] to explain petitioners [sic] his rights regarding his
rights [sic] to 12 jurors or a declaration of a mistrial.” J.A. 382. Sweeney subsequently
obtained PCR counsel, who argued that Nunzio was ineffective “by choosing to proceed
with an eleven member jury without first voir diring the remaining jurors regarding Juror
Number 4’s independent investigation of the crime scene or failing to request a mistrial.”
J.A. 432. PCR counsel emphasized that Nunzio’s failure to insist on an examination of the
remaining jurors meant that he did not know precisely what the other jurors knew about
the crime scene visit. And counsel pointed out that Juror Number 4 was around the other
jurors for nearly an hour while the court researched whether it could take the other jurors
to the crime scene.
In advancing these arguments, PCR counsel relied on a Maryland state court
decision called Nash v. State, 94 A.3d 23 (Md. 2014). PCR counsel recognized that Nash
required a motion for a mistrial before voir dire was required. But he argued Nunzio should
54
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 55 of 96
have requested to voir dire the remaining jurors under Nash anyway. According to PCR
counsel, failing to do so meant Nunzio “made the decision to move forward with an 11
member jury, essentially in a vacuum, without the information necessary to determine if
that was sound strategy.” J.A. 437.
The state PCR court held an evidentiary hearing at which Nunzio was the only
witness who testified. Nunzio explained that he was “[a]bsolutely” concerned about Juror
Number 4’s visit to the crime scene both because the juror violated a clear instruction and
because one of the issues at trial was the layout of the scene. J.A. 75–76. Nunzio recalled
that the court “extensively” examined what Juror Number 4 did at the scene. J.A. 78.
Nunzio testified that the three options available were to have the jury visit the scene,
strike Juror Number 4 and proceed with eleven jurors, or move for a mistrial. Nunzio
discussed these options with Sweeney. Although Nunzio had worried about the other
eleven jurors talking with Juror Number 4 during the recess, he thought they were in a
common room but not deliberating. The state PCR court then discussed the parties’
interpretation of the trial transcript. The parties informed the state PCR court that all twelve
jurors were in the courtroom while the trial judge questioned Juror Number 4 “with the
husher on.” J.A. 85. The state PCR court confirmed that the trial judge did not instruct the
jury not to deliberate but that they were sent to the lounge, which differed from the room
in which the jury deliberated.
Nunzio then explained how he made the decision to strike Juror Number 4. He
testified that he informed Sweeney that he would have been “more than happy to” move
for a mistrial but he “defer[red] to” Sweeney. J.A. 90. He and Sweeney reached “almost a
55
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 56 of 96
collective” agreement that Juror Number 4 could no longer serve on the jury, but they did
not want to risk the progress they had made with this jury. J.A. 90–91. Nunzio believed
that the trial had gone “very good,” that “[t]he jurors seemed to be very receptive” to the
defense theory and that favorable testimony had been introduced about the position of
various people at the scene. J.A. 90–91. Nunzio was particularly concerned that a second
trial might yield less favorable testimony from some witnesses. He reiterated that he was
not concerned about proceeding with eleven jurors because “we were making headway
inside the courtroom,” highlighting his impeachment of some of the State’s witnesses. J.A.
94.
On cross-examination, Nunzio agreed when the State’s attorney asked, “there was
nothing that [Juror Number 4] said that would lead you to believe that his observations had
in any way tainted the other jury members, was there?” J.A. 111. Nunzio believed that the
trial judge had sufficiently questioned Juror Number 4 regarding his discussions with the
other jurors. He reiterated that he had “no present-sense impression at that time and even
until today that the jury was contaminated.” J.A. 112.
The state PCR court denied Sweeney’s petition for post-conviction relief. In
rejecting Sweeney’s claim, the court explained:
Nash v. State . . . establishes two circumstances where the trial judge has a
duty to conduct voir dire sua sponte, when a party moves for a mistrial based
on juror misconduct: (1) when a juror’s actions constitute gross misconduct
sufficient to raise a presumption of prejudice that must be rebutted before a
mistrial motion is denied; and (2) when a material and relevant fact must be
resolved before a trial judge may determine whether the presumption of
prejudice attached. First of all, the Defense did not move for a mistrial, but
instead decided to move forward with eleven jurors. Secondly, before
deciding to proceed, Trial Counsel discussed options with the client on how
56
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 57 of 96
to proceed. Petitioner has failed to produce evidence that Trial Counsel
included the option to voir dire sua sponte the remaining eleven jurors,
failing to meet his burden. Defense essentially waived the issue to voir dire
sua sponte the remaining eleven jurors when he conferred with his client on
how to proceed and did so with the eleven jurors. Therefore, the Court feels
that the Defense failed to meet its burden that but for the jury consisting of
eleven jurors, the Petitioner would not have been convicted.
J.A. 452–53.
Sweeney then applied for leave to appeal the denial of his state petition. He asserted
that the state “court’s ruling fail[ed] to reckon with the claim as raised in the petition and
argued at the hearing.” J.A. 464. Sweeney argued that Nunzio should have “move[d] for a
mistrial or request[ed] that the court voir dire the rest of the jury to ascertain precisely what
Juror Number 4 told them and to what extent they may have been influenced by this
information, before deciding whether to proceed with an 11 member jury.” J.A. 465. The
failure to conduct this inquiry meant that Nunzio advised Sweeney “in a vacuum, without
the information necessary to determine if that was sound strategy.” J.A. 466. The state
court denied Sweeney’s application for leave to appeal in a one-sentence order.
C. Federal Habeas Proceedings
Next, Sweeney petitioned for federal habeas relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). In
that petition, Sweeney emphasized that Nunzio “failed to determine the extent to which
Juror Number 4 had been tainted by his visit to the crime scene and then had tainted the
other eleven jurors during the time Juror Number 4 had spent deliberating with those jurors,
and when [he] did not object to the court’s failure to make that determination.” J.A. 9.
According to Sweeney, Nunzio’s error caused Sweeney “to have his case determined by a
jury that had been tainted by information that had been provided by Juror Number 4 . . .
57
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 58 of 96
and also to waive his right to a twelve person jury in a manner that was not knowing as
required by clearly established law.” J.A. 9. Abandoning his claim that Nunzio should have
sought to voir dire the remaining jurors under Nash, Sweeney offered a new justification
for his position. This time, Sweeney relied on our Barnes v. Joyner, 751 F.3d 229 (4th Cir.
2014) decision, where we applied Remmer v. United States, 350 U.S. 377 (1956). And
Sweeney also claimed that under Barnes, he did not have to show a reasonable probability
of a different result to establish prejudice. Instead, he argued he only had to show that
counsel’s deficient performance had a substantial and injurious effect on his right to a trial
by an unbiased jury.
The district court denied Sweeney’s petition. It cited our unpublished decision in
Daniel v. West Virginia, No. 97-6806, 1999 WL 713865 (4th Cir. Sept. 14, 1999) to
conclude that Sweeney was not entitled to a presumption of prejudice. The court found that
counsel was not ineffective because he “offered [Sweeney] the option for the ultimate
remedy . . . a mistrial, but Sweeney voluntarily waived that remedy when he elected to
proceed with an eleven-member jury.” J.A. 495. It also noted that moving for a mistrial is
normally a strategic decision entrusted to counsel.
While the court recognized that “Sweeney argue[d] that his decision to waive the
12-person jury was not knowing, voluntary or intelligent,” the court found this contention
procedurally defaulted if raised as a separate claim. J.A. 495 n.6 (cleaned up). To the extent
this argument was meant only to show prejudice, the court noted that “Sweeney made the
decision to waive the 12-person jury.” J.A. 495 n.6. The court also found that “any decision
made by counsel is entitled to deference, as counsel testified that it was his impression
58
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 59 of 96
from Juror Number Four’s testimony that the remaining jury members were not tainted.”
J.A. 495 n.6. And while Sweeney alleged that “he was prejudiced because the jurors may
have discussed the crime scene visit during the recess where Juror Number 4 remained
with other members of the jury,” the court found that no evidence supported this assertion.
J.A. 495 n.7. Finally, the court held that Sweeney could not establish prejudice because he
“failed to prove that he would not have been convicted if the decision had been made by a
twelve-person jury.” J.A. 496.
This appeal followed. 4
II.
A. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Before addressing the majority’s errors, I will analyze Sweeney’s claim under our
law as I see it. In considering Sweeney’s appeal, it is important to remember what he asks
us to do. His only claim is ineffective assistance of counsel. To that end, Sweeney contends
the state court unreasonably applied Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984) to his
case. His overriding argument is that his trial counsel rendered deficient performance when
he did not request a Remmer hearing to voir dire the remaining eleven jurors about any
information Juror Number 4 might have passed on about his crime scene visit. He contends
4
The district court denied Sweeney’s habeas petition in a final order disposing of
all claims. Sweeney timely noticed this appeal, filing an informal brief in support of his
request for certificate of appealability in the absence of one from the district court. We
granted the certificate on June 26, 2023. So, we have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1292
and 2253.
59
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 60 of 96
that when a jury’s integrity is questioned—like it allegedly was when Juror Number 4 told
the other jurors that he visited the crime scene—Remmer requires a hearing “to determine
from the facts whether or not communication with the juror by the outsider and the events
that followed were prejudicial and therefore, harmful to the petitioner.” Remmer, 350 U.S.
at 378.
Sweeney claims the state PCR court improperly applied Strickland by not citing
Remmer. Analyzing Maryland’s Nash decision rather than Remmer, Sweeney insists, was
improper because “[t]he state case (Nash) that the Maryland court cited did not substitute
for Remmer.” Opening Br. 18. He claims the state PCR court’s misapplication of Strickland
persisted when it held that the trial court was not required to voir dire all remaining jurors
because Sweeney failed to move for a mistrial and when it found that Sweeney waived his
right to seek a mistrial when he elected to strike Juror Number 4 and proceed with an
eleven-person jury. Even though he was given the option for a new trial, Sweeney
complains that trial counsel’s failure to move under Remmer to voir dire the remaining
jurors deprived him of the proper information to make the “right” choice. Last, Sweeney
argues the state PCR court erred in concluding that he had not shown a reasonable
probability of a different result. Instead, he insists he need only show that his trial counsel’s
performance caused substantial and injurious effect on his right to a trial by an unbiased
jury.
60
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 61 of 96
1. Standard of Review
In advancing this claim, Sweeney faces a formidable standard of review. In fact,
three standards shape our review of this case. They relate to (1) the district court; (2) the
state court; and (3) ineffective assistance of counsel claims.
First, in reviewing a district court’s application of the standards of 28 U.S.C. §
2254(d), “we review the district court’s legal conclusions de novo and findings of fact for
clear error.” Wolfe v. Clarke, 691 F.3d 410, 423 (4th Cir. 2012) (quotation marks and
citation omitted).
Second, our authority to collaterally review a state court adjudication is strictly
circumscribed by AEDPA. See Barnes v. Joyner, 751 F.3d 229, 238 (4th Cir. 2014). Under
AEDPA, we may grant habeas relief on a claim that has been previously “adjudicated on
the merits” 5 in state court only if that adjudication “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.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). 6 As the
Supreme Court has explained:
5
We lack power to review habeas claims that are not reviewed by state courts. “[A]
federal habeas court may not review unexhausted claims that would be treated as
procedurally barred by state courts—absent cause and prejudice or a fundamental
miscarriage of justice.” Longworth v. Ozmint, 377 F.3d 437, 447–48 (4th Cir. 2004); see
also Horner v. Nines, 995 F.3d 185, 208 (4th Cir. 2021) (denying habeas relief for
unexhausted, procedurally defaulted claims).
6
§ 2254(d)(2) also permits claims that “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.” Neither Sweeney nor the majority argues this prong is relevant to this case.
61
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 62 of 96
[A] state-court decision can involve an “unreasonable application” of [the
Supreme] Court’s clearly established precedent in two ways. First, a state-
court decision involves an unreasonable application . . . if the state court
identifies the correct governing legal rule . . . but unreasonably applies it to
the facts of the particular state prisoner’s case. Second . . . if the state court
either unreasonably extends a legal principle from [the Supreme Court’s]
precedent to a new context where it should not apply or unreasonably refuses
to extend that principle to a new context where it should apply.
Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 407 (2000) (O’Connor, J., delivering the majority opinion
with respect to Part II).
But the bar is high. The state court’s application of that law must be “‘objectively
unreasonable,’ not simply incorrect.” Owens v. Stirling, 967 F.3d 396, 411 (4th Cir. 2020)
(quoting Barnes, 751 F.3d at 238–39). Indeed, “[a] state court’s determination that a claim
lacks merit precludes federal habeas relief so long as ‘fairminded jurists could disagree’ on
the correctness of the state court’s decision.” Harrington v. Richter, 562 U.S. 86, 101
(2011) (quoting Yarborough v. Alvarado, 541 U.S. 652, 664 (2004)).
AEDPA creates such an exacting standard because our review involves the
sovereignty of the states. “Where a state court has previously ruled on the alleged wrongful
conviction, as has happened in this case, concerns of comity and federalism ‘reach their
apex.’” Crockett v. Clarke, 35 F.4th 231, 241 (4th Cir. 2022) (quoting Valentino v. Clarke,
972 F.3d 560, 575 (4th Cir. 2020)). Thus, the Supreme Court has emphasized that habeas
relief is not an opportunity for federal courts to look over the shoulder of state courts.
“Section 2254(d) reflects the view that habeas corpus is a guard against extreme
malfunctions in the state criminal justice systems, not a substitute for ordinary error
correction through appeal.” Harrington, 562 U.S. at 102–03 (quotation marks and citation
62
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 63 of 96
omitted). The Supreme Court has stated, “[i]t bears repeating that even a strong case for
relief does not mean the state court’s contrary conclusion was unreasonable.” Id. at 102. It
is hard to overstate the difficulty of the burden that must be met. As the Supreme Court
explained: “If this standard is difficult to meet, that is because it was meant to be.” Id.
Third, Sweeney brings an ineffective assistance of counsel claim under Strickland.
There, the Supreme Court reaffirmed that the Sixth Amendment right to counsel “is the
right to the effective assistance of counsel.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 686 (quoting McMann
v. Richardson, 397 U.S. 759, 771 & n.14 (1970) (cleaned up)). Strickland set forth a two-
prong test governing ineffective assistance of counsel claims. A petitioner must show that
(1) his counsel’s performance was deficient and (2) counsel’s deficient performance
prejudiced his defense. Id. at 687.
To prove the first prong, the petitioner must demonstrate “that counsel made errors
so serious that counsel was not functioning as the ‘counsel’ guaranteed [him] by the Sixth
Amendment.” Id. “Judicial scrutiny of counsel’s performance must be highly deferential.”
Id. at 689. “The critical question is whether an attorney’s representation amounted to
incompetence under prevailing professional norms, not whether it deviated from best
practices or most common custom.” Winston v. Pearson, 683 F.3d 489, 504 (4th Cir. 2012)
(quotation marks and citation omitted). And “strategic choices made after thorough
investigation of law and facts relevant to plausible options are virtually
unchallengeable.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690. Even “strategic choices made after less than
complete investigation are reasonable precisely to the extent that reasonable professional
judgments support the limitations on investigation.” Id. at 690–91.
63
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 64 of 96
To prove the second prong, the petitioner must show “that counsel’s errors were so
serious as to deprive [him] of a fair trial, a trial whose result is reliable.” Id. at 687. “It is
not enough for the [petitioner] to show that the errors had some conceivable effect on the
outcome of the proceeding,” as “[v]irtually every act or omission of counsel would meet
that test.” Id. at 693. And “not every error that conceivably could have influenced the
outcome undermines the reliability of the result of the proceeding.” Id. “Instead, Strickland
asks whether it is ‘reasonably likely’ the result would have been different.” Harrington,
562 U.S. at 111–12 (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 696). “This does not require a showing
that counsel’s actions ‘more likely than not altered the outcome,’ but the difference between
Strickland’s prejudice standard and a more-probable-than-not standard is slight and matters
‘only in the rarest case.’” Id. (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 693, 697). Ultimately, “[t]he
likelihood of a different result must be substantial, not just conceivable.” Id. at 112.
But Sweeney’s appeal involves not just a claim that trial counsel’s assistance was
ineffective. It involves a claim that the state PCR court misapplied Strickland.
“Establishing that a state court’s application of Strickland was unreasonable under
§ 2254(d) is all the more difficult.” Id. at 105. “AEDPA and Strickland thus provide ‘dual
and overlapping’ lenses of deference, which we apply ‘simultaneously rather than
sequentially.’” Owens, 967 F.3d at 411 (quoting Richardson v. Branker, 668 F.3d 128, 139
(4th Cir. 2012)). “When § 2254(d) applies, the question is not whether counsel’s actions
were reasonable. The question is whether there is any reasonable argument that counsel
satisfied Strickland’s deferential standard.” Harrington, 562 U.S. at 105. The combination
64
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 65 of 96
of AEDPA and an ineffective assistance claim creates one of the most daunting standards
in our law. 7
With these standards in mind, we turn to Sweeney’s arguments on appeal.
2. The state court did not unreasonably apply Strickland’s deficient representation
prong.
Sweeney says the state PCR court unreasonably applied Strickland by not
considering whether his trial counsel’s failure to request that the remaining jurors be
questioned offended Remmer. There are three reasons why his argument fails.
a.
First, Sweeney is right that the state PCR court did not cite Remmer. But that is
because Sweeney did not cite Remmer to it. Sweeney’s state PCR claim instead relied on
Maryland’s state law Nash decision. That case discusses a trial judge’s responsibility to
voir dire the jury sua sponte when a party has moved for a mistrial. It says nothing about
the separate issue of when counsel may move to voir dire the jury.
A habeas petitioner must give the state an “opportunity to pass upon and correct
alleged violations of its prisoners’ federal rights.” Duncan v. Henry, 513 U.S. 364, 365
7
Analogies outside the law are not always helpful, but one from tennis might shed
some light on the steep hill Sweeney must climb. Recently, tennis legend Rafael Nadal,
considered one of the greatest tennis players of all time, retired. Nadal holds twenty-two
major titles, including a remarkable fourteen French Open championships. During his
career, Nadal won one hundred twelve of the one hundred sixteen matches he played on
the famed red clay of Roland Garros. That record caused one commentator to claim that
“[t]he hardest thing in sports is beating Rafa Nadal in 3 out of 5 sets on clay.” Annacone,
Paul, Sportskeeda (May 16, 2022), https://perma.cc/6JTM-N96X. Sweeney’s task might
be said to be the legal equivalent of beating Nadal at the French Open.
65
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 66 of 96
(1995) (quotation marks and citation omitted). He provides this opportunity by “‘fairly
present[ing]’ his claim in each appropriate state court . . . thereby alerting that court to the
federal nature of the claim.” Baldwin v. Reese, 541 U.S. 27, 29 (2004)
(quoting Duncan, 513 U.S. at 365–66 (1995)). Sweeney did not do this. As a result, the
state PCR court could not have misapplied Strickland by not addressing a theory Sweeney
never advanced—and indeed, it did not.
Besides, the state court correctly applied Nash; it said that because Sweeney did not
request a mistrial, the trial judge had no duty to sua sponte voir dire the jurors. In fact,
Sweeney has not argued to us that the state PCR court misapplied the theory that he
advanced to that court. He argues that the state PCR court misapplied Strickland by not
considering a claim that he did not make until his habeas petition in federal court. But we
are reviewing a state court action under AEDPA. We cannot say the state court
unreasonably applied an argument it never had a chance to address.
b.
Second, even if Sweeney had advanced a Remmer argument to the state PCR court,
Sweeney has not shown it would be an unreasonable application of Strickland to reject it.
That’s because it is not clear that Remmer even applies to this case. Recall that habeas relief
as Sweeney has argued it requires an adjudication that “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). That means the state court decision must violate
“the holdings, as opposed to the dicta, of [the Supreme Court’s] decisions as of the time of
the relevant state-court decision.” Williams, 529 U.S. at 412.
66
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 67 of 96
In Remmer, a juror told the judge that a third party tried to bribe him. 350 U.S. at
380. The judge never informed defense counsel, and the trial went on. Id. at 378. When the
defense learned of the contact after the trial ended, it moved for a new trial. Id. Ultimately,
the Supreme Court determined that a hearing was necessary given that “any private
communication, contact, or tampering directly or indirectly, with a juror during a trial about
the matter pending before the jury is, for obvious reasons, deemed presumptively
prejudicial.” Id. at 379.
The Supreme Court has not clearly established that a juror’s visit to a crime scene
constitutes a “communication, contact, or tampering” sufficient to trigger Remmer. Indeed,
at oral argument Sweeney’s counsel conceded as much:
JUDGE QUATTLEBAUM: “Has the Supreme Court clearly established that a
Remmer hearing applies in a situation like this . . . ?”
MR. CONFUSIONE: “I don’t think they have.”
Oral Argument: 6:20–6:42. 8
Consistent with that concession, Sweeney cites no Supreme Court case holding
Remmer applies to Sweeney’s facts. Granted, several circuits have extended Remmer to
claims alleging juror exposure to extraneous information. See Mayhue v. St. Francis Hosp.
of Wichita, Inc., 969 F.2d 919, 922 (10th Cir. 1992); United States v. Perkins, 748 F.2d
1519, 1533–34 (11th Cir. 1984); United States v. Hillard, 701 F.2d 1052, 1064 (2d Cir.
1983); United States v. Bassler, 651 F.2d 600, 603 (8th Cir. 1981)). But the Supreme Court
8
Oral Argument: 6:20–6:42. https://www.ca4.uscourts.gov/OAarchive/mp3/22-
6513-20240926.mp3
67
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 68 of 96
has rejected “the mistaken belief that circuit precedent may be used to refine or sharpen a
general principle of Supreme Court jurisprudence into a specific legal rule that this Court
has not announced.” Marshall v. Rodgers, 569 U.S. 58, 64 (2013).
Further, other circuit cases affirmatively undermine Sweeney’s argument. Not every
circuit extends Remmer to a juror’s exposure to extraneous information. As the Eighth
Circuit has recognized, “other circuits have confined the application of Remmer to cases
alleging third-party contact with jurors.” Tunstall v. Hopkins, 306 F.3d 601, 611 (8th Cir.
2002) (citing United States v. Lloyd, 269 F.3d 228, 238 (3d Cir. 2001)); United States v.
Williams–Davis, 90 F.3d 490, 501–02 (D.C. Cir. 1996); United States v. Boylan, 898 F.2d
230, 260–61 (1st Cir. 1990)). “When the federal circuits disagree on the application of
Remmer regarding any presumption of prejudice, it is difficult to say the [state] court’s
decision is contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established
federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court.” Id.
What’s more, all Remmer requires is a hearing “to determine from the facts whether
or not communication with the juror by the outsider and the events that followed were
prejudicial and, therefore, harmful to the petitioner.” 350 U.S. at 378. It does not require
voir dire of all jurors. Here, once the jury alerted the trial judge that Juror Number 4 visited
the crime scene and mentioned his visit to the other jurors, the trial judge inquired into the
juror misconduct. He asked Juror Number 4 what he did. He learned from Juror Number 4
that the other jurors stopped him from discussing what he saw at the scene. And he
instructed Juror Number 4 to refrain from discussing his visit with the other jurors while
the judge and the parties discussed various options available to address the juror’s
68
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 69 of 96
misconduct. The trial judge then gave Sweeney the opportunity to seek relief. The trial
judge and both parties’ counsel discussed various options, from all the jurors visiting the
crime scene to a mistrial to striking Juror Number 4. After consulting with trial counsel,
Sweeney elected to strike Juror Number 4 and proceed to trial with eleven jurors. True, no
one discussed questioning the remaining jurors. But nothing in Remmer requires that
specific procedure. So, it is not at all clear that Sweeney did not, in fact, receive a Remmer
hearing.
In sum, the state PCR court could not unreasonably apply Strickland by determining
Sweeney’s trial counsel’s failure to request a Remmer hearing was not deficient when the
Supreme Court has not clearly established that Remmer applies to this situation. This is
especially true when it is not clear that the proceedings that took place fall short of
Remmer’s requirements.
c.
Third, Sweeney’s deficiency argument boils down to an attack upon Nunzio’s
strategic decision made in the heat of trial. The state PCR court made this very point. It
explained that “[t]his Court finds that many of the allegations made by [Sweeney] are
attributed to the Defenses’ choice in strategy that ultimately did not work in the Defendant’s
favor. Unsuccessful strategy does not result in an overturning of a conviction.” J.A. 452.
The state PCR court did not unreasonably apply Strickland in concluding that Nunzio’s
decision to strike Juror Number 4 and proceed with the trial was the type of strategic
decision for which post-conviction relief was inappropriate.
69
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 70 of 96
Nunzio believed that the trial had gone “very good,” that “[t]he jurors seemed to be
very receptive” to the defense theory and that favorable testimony had been introduced
about the position of various people at the scene, including Sweeney. J.A. 90–91. Nunzio
was concerned that a second trial might yield less favorable testimony from some
witnesses. He reiterated that he was not concerned about proceeding with eleven jurors
because, highlighting his impeachment of some of the State’s witnesses, “we were making
headway inside the courtroom.” J.A. 94. He explained that “[t]he jurors seemed to be very
receptive as you watched them day after day after day.” J.A. 91. Nunzio continued, “[t]hey
were very attentive. There were things that came out of the trial that we both thought were
very positive,” including ballistics evidence regarding the gunman’s position as compared
to Sweeney’s alleged position. J.A. 91.
Because several eyewitnesses testified for the prosecution, Nunzio faced an uphill
battle in defending his client against the government’s charges. Recognizing that, he
responded to the comment that “[y]ou didn’t have but so much to work with,” by stating,
“[c]orrect . . . at the end of the day, you have multiple people who are testifying as to the
same thing.” J.A. 108. Nunzio believed his options were limited. With glimmers of hope
in a difficult situation, he weighed the dangers of proceeding with the eleven-member jury
after Juror Number 4’s visit. Juror Number 4 reported that the other jurors told him to stop
talking about his visit to the scene as soon as he brought it up. And Nunzio testified that at
no time did he believe that the jury had been tainted by any substantive information
acquired by Juror Number 4.
70
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 71 of 96
Maybe Nunzio was right; maybe he was wrong. Maybe other lawyers, including
those in the majority, would have made a different decision; maybe they would not. It does
not matter. It is neither our job, nor our prerogative, to nitpick these impressions from the
vantage of hindsight and what-ifs. “A lawyer must make many decisions before and during
the course of a trial. And what often makes those decisions so difficult is that many cut
both ways. The decision to advance an argument, introduce certain evidence, call a witness,
cross-examine a witness aggressively or lightly and so many other decisions can be—and
often are—double-edged swords. There are pros and cons each way.” Stokes v. Stirling, 10
F.4th 236, 257 (4th Cir. 2021) (Quattlebaum, J., dissenting) (vacated and remanded). Even
if Nunzio’s decision not to demand a Remmer hearing was “made after less than complete
investigation,” it was still presumed “reasonable precisely to the extent that reasonable
professional judgments support the limitations on investigation.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at
690–91. Because there is no clearly established right to a Remmer hearing in this situation,
reasonable professional judgments must support the decision not to seek one.
And we should not forget Sweeney’s role in the strategic choice he now decries.
Nunzio informed Sweeney that he would have been “more than happy to” move for a
mistrial, but he “defer[red] to” Sweeney. J.A. 90. Sweeney, like Nunzio, disfavored a
mistrial. They reached “almost a collective” agreement to proceed with eleven jurors. J.A.
90. Under our system of representation, which relies on cooperation between client and
counsel, lawyers must factor their clients’ wishes into their approach to the case.
Accordingly, clients cannot advocate for a course of action and then turn around and
criticize their lawyer for pursuing it. Remember, the “reasonableness of counsel’s actions
71
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 72 of 96
may be determined or substantially influenced by the defendant’s own statements or
actions. Counsel’s actions are usually based, quite properly, on informed strategic choices
made by the defendant and on information supplied by the defendant.” Strickland, 466 U.S.
at 691. For these reasons, Sweeney has not shown that the state PCR court misapplied
Strickland’s deficiency requirement.
3. The state court did not unreasonably apply Strickland’s prejudice prong.
Sweeney also argues that the state PCR court unreasonably applied Strickland in
finding that trial counsel’s performance did not prejudice Sweeney. Remember, to show
prejudice, Sweeney must show a substantial likelihood of a different result if Nunzio had
requested a Remmer hearing. Harrington, 562 U.S. at 112. Before examining Sweeney’s
argument, recall the state PCR court’s prejudice holding: “[T]he Court feels that the
Defense failed to meet its burden that but for the jury consisting of eleven jurors, the
Petitioner would not have been convicted.” J.A. 453. Reviewing the state PCR court’s order
in totality reveals that the state PCR court displayed a proper understanding of the prejudice
standard:
[S]ome of Trial Counsel’s actions could prejudice the defendant in some
fashion. However, the standard the Defendant must meet to overturn a
conviction is not only that trial counsel was inefficient, but also that but for
that inefficiency, the Petitioner would not have been convicted. In this
instance, there was ample evidence implicating the Petitioner in the murder
of Robert Anderson. The cumulative allegations do not show that Petitioner’s
Constitutional right was violated.
J.A. 452. As explained below, nothing in the record suggests the state PCR court’s
application of that standard “resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an
72
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 73 of 96
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).
Sweeney faced a mountain of evidence. Indeed, the Maryland Court of Special
Appeals described the prosecution’s evidence:
In the instant case the jury was presented with testimony which
portrayed [Sweeney] as the shooter. He accused McDonald of stealing his
marijuana, approached a gathering of McDonald and several others with a
gun clip in his hand, argued loudly with McDonald and threatened that he
would “kill somebody,” walked back up the street toward his home while
inserting the clip into a handgun, continued to shout at McDonald and dared
him to “cross the gun line,” and a short time later, while in front of his home,
shot once into the air and then fired several shots towards McDonald and the
others who were in the same area where Anderson was struck in the head and
killed.
J.A. 374. Sweeney challenges the relevance of this evidence. But the Supreme Court has
held the exact opposite. “In making this [prejudice] determination, a court hearing an
ineffectiveness claim must consider the totality of the evidence before the judge or jury.”
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 695.
While there is plenty of evidence for the jury to convict Sweeney, the record
contains no evidence that the jury was tainted—none. Juror Number 4 reported that the
other jurors immediately told him to stop talking about his visit to the scene. He was
subsequently struck from the jury. True, it is possible he was lying. And in theory, Juror
Number 4 had an opportunity to continue talking about his visit while the court conferred
with counsel. But Sweeney proffered no evidence of either of these possibilities. That
dearth of evidence is fatal. We are not permitted to speculate on possibilities not in the
record. To the contrary, “[i]n a federal habeas corpus proceeding, we presume that the state
73
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 74 of 96
court findings are correct.” Bell v. Evatt, 72 F.3d 421, 429 (4th Cir. 1995) (citing 28 U.S.C.
§ 2254(d)). And in reviewing a district court’s application of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), “we
review the district court’s legal conclusions de novo and findings of fact for clear error.”
Wolfe, 691 F.3d at 423 (quotation marks and citation omitted). Neither the state court nor
the district court found any facts suggesting Juror Number 4 gave the rest of the jury any
details about his visit. That’s because there were none. There is no evidence in the record
suggesting that Juror Number 4 did anything other than what he said. In fact, the record
shows that when the other jurors learned of Juror Number 4’s trip to the crime scene, they
stopped him from discussing it—“they stopped me, too, because they thought that I should
stop talking and [] present what I just said to you all.” J.A. 191.
Not only is there no evidence any of the remaining jurors were tainted; there is no
evidence that had Nunzio voir dired the remaining jurors, Sweeney would have avoided
conviction. Even if the other jurors were questioned and even if one or more had been
tainted with information from Juror Number 4, the remedy would have been a mistrial. In
other words, the charges against Sweeney would not have gone away; he’d just have been
tried again. And at that trial he’d face that same mountain of evidence he faced in the trial
where he was convicted. There is no reason for predicting a different result had Sweeney
chosen a mistrial.
Rather than explaining how the state PCR court’s decision conflicted with clearly
established Supreme Court holdings, Sweeney attempts to shift the test’s focus from these
decisions. Instead of following established law, the majority asks a different question—
regardless of any prejudice, did the events surrounding Juror Number 4 deprive Sweeney
74
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 75 of 96
of a fair trial? In this effort, he relies on Lockhart v. Fretwell, 506 U.S. 364, 368–70 (1993).
In that case, a district court granted a petitioner’s capital murder conviction after the
Arkansas Supreme Court affirmed the sentence. Id. at 367. After the Eighth Circuit
affirmed the district court, the Supreme Court reversed. Id. at 368. But Lockhart does not
replace the results test with a fairness test. To the contrary, Lockhart makes the petitioner’s
burden heavier. There, the Supreme Court said, “an analysis focusing solely on mere
outcome determination, without attention to whether the result of the proceeding was
fundamentally unfair or unreliable, is defective. To set aside a conviction or sentence solely
because the outcome would have been different but for counsel’s error may grant the
defendant a windfall . . . .” Id. at 369–70 (cleaned up). Thus, if anything, Lockhart adds an
element of unfairness; it does not offer it as an alternative. Indeed, “[c]ases such as Nix v.
Whiteside and Lockhart v. Fretwell do not justify a departure from a straightforward
application of Strickland when the ineffectiveness of counsel does deprive the defendant
of a substantive or procedural right to which the law entitles him.” Williams, 529 U.S. at
393 (cleaned up). That is precisely what Sweeney argues he was deprived of here.
Sweeney also cites the Supreme Court’s opinion in Weaver v. Massachusetts, 582
U.S. 286 (2017) for the notion that he need only show general unfairness. And it is true
that Weaver hints that in the context of structural error—which Sweeney never argued—
the prejudice analysis might sometimes center on fairness rather than outcomes. See id. at
300. But the Court explicitly declared those hints dicta, disclaiming, “[i]n light of the
Court’s ultimate holding, however, the Court need not decide that question here.” Id.
Because the state court decision must violate the “holdings, as opposed to the dicta, of [the
75
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 76 of 96
Supreme] Court’s decisions as of the time of the relevant state-court decision,” it does not
affect our analysis. See Williams, 529 U.S. at 412. Weaver thus offers no legitimate avenue
for saying the state court applied Strickland inconsistently with any clearly established
Supreme Court holdings.
In AEDPA cases, the petitioner must show that the state court whose decision we
are reviewing violated clearly established Supreme Court law. Sweeney doesn’t do this.
He doesn’t even try. As a result, his claim must fail.
4. Conclusion
To sum up, Sweeney did not argue Remmer to the state PCR court; he admits he
cannot show Remmer even applies; he does not deny that his lawyer’s decision to strike
Juror Number 4 and proceed to trial with eleven jurors was a strategic decision; and he
does not even attempt to argue that a Remmer hearing had a reasonable probability of
producing a different outcome. Under Supreme Court precedent, any one of these is
independently sufficient to doom Sweeney’s case. Together, they are insurmountable. I
would affirm the district court’s decision that the state PCR court did not unreasonably
apply Strickland.
B. The Majority’s Errors
The majority, of course, comes to a different conclusion. Primarily, it raises a litany
of issues not addressed before any of the Maryland courts or before the district court. To
the majority, these new issues show that Sweeney’s Sixth Amendment right to an impartial
jury was violated. Within that analysis, almost as an afterthought, the majority addresses
Sweeney’s claim that the Maryland PCR court misapplied his ineffective assistance of
76
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 77 of 96
counsel claim. I will first explain my disagreements with the majority’s treatment of
Sweeney’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim—the only issue properly before us—
before turning to the majority’s spontaneous Sixth Amendment impartial jury analysis.
1. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
In fairness, I’m not sure the majority attempts to conduct an ineffective assistance
of counsel analysis. It doesn’t even analyze Sweeney’s counsel’s conduct until page 33 of
its opinion. And the majority’s discussion there seems more like another item on the
laundry list of things the majority feels should have been done better or differently at
Sweeney’s trial than an independent analysis. But to the extent it reviews Sweeney’s
ineffective assistance of counsel claim, the majority goes astray by ignoring our required
standard of review, by misapplying Strickland’s deficient performance prong and by failing
to assess whether curing the deficiencies it finds would have been reasonably likely to
result in a different outcome under Strickland’s prejudice prong.
a.
First, the majority simply ignores the statutorily mandated standard of review for
this claim. Recall that under AEDPA—which necessarily guides our review—we may
grant habeas relief on a claim that has been previously “adjudicated on the merits” in state
court only if that adjudication “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.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). And “[a] state court’s determination
that a claim lacks merit precludes federal habeas relief so long as fairminded jurists could
77
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 78 of 96
disagree on the correctness of the state court’s decision.” Harrington, 562 U.S. 86, 101
(2011) (quotation marks and citation omitted).
The majority ignores this. It doesn’t say anything about whether fairminded jurists
could disagree with the Maryland PCR court’s decision; indeed, it hardly discusses that
state court decision at all.
In the section of its opinion that discusses ineffective assistance of counsel, the
majority cites the two Strickland prongs. And of course, Strickland is the Supreme Court’s
foundational ineffective assistance of counsel decision. But we are not on direct review of
a Strickland decision. We are on a collateral review of the Maryland PCR court’s
application of Strickland. Indeed, in its 46-page opinion, the majority never says the state
PCR court unreasonably applied clearly established federal law. How then can it grant
relief?
In Harrington, the Supreme Court rebuked a circuit court decision that, like the
majority, ignored AEDPA’s standard of review. Here is what the Court said:
Here it is not apparent how the Court of Appeals’ analysis would have
been any different without AEDPA. The court explicitly conducted a de novo
review, and after finding a Strickland violation, it declared, without further
explanation, that the state court’s decision to the contrary constituted an
unreasonable application of Strickland. AEDPA demands more. Under §
2254(d), a habeas court must determine what arguments or theories
supported or, as here, could have supported, the state court’s decision; and
then it must ask whether it is possible fairminded jurists could disagree that
those arguments or theories are inconsistent with the holding in a prior
decision of this Court. The opinion of the Court of Appeals all but ignored
the only question that matters under § 2254(d)(1).
The Court of Appeals appears to have treated the unreasonableness
question as a test of its confidence in the result it would reach under de novo
review: Because the Court of Appeals had little doubt that Richter’s
Strickland claim had merit, the Court of Appeals concluded the state court
78
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 79 of 96
must have been unreasonable in rejecting it. This analysis overlooks
arguments that would otherwise justify the state court's result and ignores
further limitations of § 2254(d), including its requirement that the state
court's decision be evaluated according to the precedents of this Court. It
bears repeating that even a strong case for relief does not mean the state
court’s contrary conclusion was unreasonable.
Harrington, 562 U.S. at 101–02 (quotation marks and citations omitted). What the Ninth
Circuit explicitly did in Harrington, the majority does implicitly—it conducts a de novo
review. AEDPA does not permit this.
In addition, the majority ignores the overlapping standard that applies for
ineffective assistance of counsel claims. Remember that for such claims, a petitioner like
Sweeney must “[e]stablish[] that a state court’s application of Strickland was unreasonable
under § 2254(d) . . . .” Id. at 105. This makes his burden “all the more difficult.” Id.
We are not permitted to brush these standards aside. Standards of review may not
be exciting. But that does not mean they are not important. They are required guardrails
for appellate review. They protect against judicial excess by prohibiting appellate judges
from substituting their judgment for that of other courts that, under the law, have priority.
The majority is not permitted to cast aside the standard of review that governs Sweeney’s
claims.
79
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 80 of 96
b.
Second, the majority fails to properly apply Strickland’s prong one—deficient
performance. For brevity’s sake, 9 I will describe just four examples of the majority’s
failures.
One, the majority says “Nunzio did not reasonably investigate Juror No. 4’s taint
nor the potential taint of the remaining eleven jurors.” Maj. Op at 33–34. But as the majority
notes, Nunzio did ask Juror Number 4 whether the other jurors knew he visited the crime
scene. And after answering yes, Juror Number 4 said they stopped him from saying
anything else.
The majority says Nunzio should have asked more questions and should have
requested that the other jurors be questioned, too. That alone should give us pause. A panel
of appellate judges is micromanaging a trial lawyer on how he should question a juror.
How many questions would have satisfied the majority? And is there a danger that
excessive questioning will prejudice the jury? The majority offers no guidance—just its
view on Monday morning that the quarterback should have thrown a better pass.
But the majority’s reasoning is even more concerning considering the context of the
questions and answers it criticizes. Juror Number 4’s answer was consistent with the note
the other jurors sent the judge. Remember that the note said “[t]there was no interaction.”
J.A. 190. With that corroborating information, Nunzio’s satisfaction with addressing the
9
Using “brevity” to describe even a part of 50-page dissent is admittedly ironic. I
appreciate that doing so may have caused readers to roll their eyes.
80
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 81 of 96
potential taint makes more sense. Could he have done more? Sure. But with Juror Number
4’s answers matching the jury’s note, Nunzio felt he had enough information make a
strategic decision. Strickland does not permit us to second guess it.
The majority’s explanation for why it feels more questions should have been asked
reveals the extent of its nit-picking. The majority says that Juror Number 4’s positive
response to Nunzio’s question—“Do any of the other jurors know you went there?”—
means Nunzio failed to determine how many knew he went to the scene. But why does that
matter if there was no interaction about what Juror Number 4 did or saw? Sure, Nunzio
could have asked twenty more questions to rule out the possibility that one or more jurors
learned something else. But his efforts were hardly constitutionally deficient, especially
when Sweeney has absolutely no evidence that there was any contamination.
Not only does the majority nit-pick; to support its conclusion that Nunzio should
have asked more questions, the majority misconstrues the record. When asked, Juror
Number 4 said he could decide the case based on the evidence presented at trial.
Perplexingly, the majority says “Juror No. 4’s response suggests that what he saw at the
crime scene verified what he had heard at trial from the government. It is reasonable to
infer that Juror No. 4 expressed that he could ‘bas[e] [his] decision . . . off of the evidence
which was presented in the case’ because his visit confirmed the evidence presented at
trial––eyewitness testimony and the diagram––all of which was government evidence.”
Maj. Op. at 35 (emphasis added). Why is that reasonable to infer? The juror never said that
and nothing he did say supports that inference. Rather than faithfully reviewing the record,
the majority speculates. See Koon v. North Carolina, 50 F.4th 398, 409 (4th Cir. 2022) (“A
81
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 82 of 96
permissible inference must be reasonably probable given the facts, not just conceivable or
possible. So we must reject tenuous inferences that rest upon speculation and conjecture.”).
Similarly, when asked if he could decide the case based on the evidence from trial,
Juror Number 4 stated the other jurors “would have no problem with basing their decision,
off of the evidence which was presented in the case.” J.A. 192. To the majority, “Juror No.
4’s remark indicates that he knew, or at least had insight into, how the other jurors would
proceed moving forward based on how they had reacted to the information he shared.”
Maj. Op. at 35. What does the majority mean by this? Juror Number 4 said the other jurors
could base their decision on the evidence alone. If we make any reasonable inference at all
about this, it is that Juror Number 4 believed the other jurors would limit their deliberations
to the evidence as the court instructed them because they stopped him from saying anything
more. It is hard to see what the majority seeks to wring from this.
Two, the majority criticizes Nunzio for not “contemplat[ing] a potential mistrial on
the record.” Maj. Op. at 36. This is remarkable. The record, considered as a whole, does
show that Nunzio considered a mistrial. As the district court explained, “[t]he record
reflects that Sweeney’s counsel offered him the option for the ultimate remedy under
Remmer, a mistrial, but Sweeney voluntarily waived that remedy when he elected to
proceed with an eleven-member jury.” J.A. 495. The record we are supposed to review—
not the trial record in isolation—shows Nunzio did contemplate a mistrial, but he ultimately
deferred to his client’s wishes.
And Nunzio had good reasons to defer to Sweeney’s wishes. Remember, the
government had a mountain of incriminating evidence. Nunzio felt he had landed some
82
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 83 of 96
blows in cross-examining the government’s witnesses, blows he feared he could not
replicate as effectively at a second trial where he would not have the element of surprise.
Despite all that, rather than discussing the mistrial issue with Sweeney privately, the
majority apparently would have had Nunzio “contemplate a potential mistrial on the
record.” Maj. Op at 36. Not doing so, the majority concludes, “was unreasonable.” Maj.
Op. at 36. Even there, though, the majority gets the standard of review wrong. The question
is not whether we think Nunzio acted reasonably. The question is whether any fairminded
jurist could find it reasonable to not openly “contemplate a mistrial on the record.” Maj.
Op. at 36. But under any standard, the majority’s reasoning is hard to understand. After all,
what does contemplating a mistrial on the record mean? I can’t see why all fairminded
jurists would find what Nunzio did on this issue constitutionally deficient.
Three, the majority says, “one could say that proceeding with an eleven-person jury
in any murder case––significantly, one where the defendant is facing multiple life
sentences, and where the defense did not present any evidence––is questionable.” Maj. Op.
at 37. Why is that? Here, even if Nunzio’s information was not as conclusive as the majority
would like, he had information that the remaining eleven jurors were untainted by
information about Juror Number 4’s crime scene visit. Those remaining jurors also had
heard Nunzio’s cross-examination of the government’s witnesses, where Nunzio felt he
had scored some points. So, the question is not whether you’d rather have eleven or twelve
jurors in isolation. The question is whether you’d rather have eleven jurors who heard the
cross-examination you perceived to have been effective and who you don’t think are tainted
hear the mountain of evidence against your client—or whether you’d rather have twelve
83
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 84 of 96
jurors who you are absolutely sure aren’t tainted but might not hear as effective of a cross-
examination consider that same mountain of evidence.
Whether we agree or disagree with what Nunzio did doesn’t matter. Supreme Court
and Fourth Circuit precedent is clear. “[S]trategic choices made after thorough
investigation of law and facts relevant to plausible options are virtually
unchallengeable[,]” and even “strategic choices made after less than complete
investigation are reasonable precisely to the extent that reasonable professional judgments
support the limitations on investigation.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690–91; see Cox v. Weber,
102 F.4th 663, 676–677 (4th Cir. 2024), cert. denied, No. 24-6014, 2025 WL 247479 (U.S.
Jan. 21, 2025). We should not second guess Nunzio’s strategic choice.
Also, the “reasonableness of counsel’s actions may be determined or substantially
influenced by the defendant’s own statements or actions. Counsel’s actions are usually
based, quite properly, on informed strategic choices made by the defendant and on
information supplied by the defendant.” Id. at 691. According to the majority, Nunzio
should have disregarded Sweeney’s wishes. First, that is not what Supreme Court law
requires. Second, will such a rule make defendants better off? Would the majority have
defense counsel ignore clients’ wishes even when they accord with counsel’s own strategic
judgment?
Four, now on a roll, the majority declares, “[i]t is unreasonable for a defense
attorney in a murder case to believe that things ‘were very positive’ where he presented no
witnesses nor evidence, no matter how ‘receptive’ or ‘attentive’ the jurors seemed to be.”
Maj. Op. at 38. Once again, why is this right? Criminal defendants often do not have helpful
84
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 85 of 96
affirmative evidence. After all, favorable witnesses do not grow on trees. Neither does
favorable evidence. The best—maybe the only—option for lawyers defending clients
charged with crimes in some cases is to poke holes in the government’s case. Sometimes
that goes well. Sometimes it doesn’t. But I don’t understand the majority’s categorical
statement that when a lawyer is in that position, as Nunzio seems to have been, he can’t
make strategic decisions based on a belief that he had made progress in carrying out that
strategy. Remember that Sweeney faced an uphill battle from the start. Multiple
eyewitnesses to the shooting testified at trial. Nunzio achieved what he could on cross-
examination and observed a positive reaction from the jury. Indeed, the reaction was
positive enough that Sweeney himself did not want a new trial.
I fear the consequences of this micro-managing of defense counsel. I can’t help but
believe that many defense attorneys will read this decision, scratch their heads and wonder
what they are supposed to do. Whatever strategic choices they make will be attacked by
disaffected former clients and judges who think their Monday-morning quarterbacking
would have won the game. They will fear, reasonably, that a judge may muse that he would
have approached the case differently and declare their assistance ineffective, with all the
travails that can attend—professional discipline, fines, reputational damage and
malpractice suits. The resulting risk aversion will do nothing to help defendants like
Sweeney.
For these reasons, the majority fails to properly apply Strickland’s prong one
requirement of deficient performance.
85
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 86 of 96
c.
As to Strickland’s prejudice prong, the majority spends barely two paragraphs.
Remember that to show prejudice, “Strickland asks whether it is ‘reasonably likely’ the
result would have been different.” Harrington, 562 U.S. at 111–12 (citing Strickland, 466
U.S. at 696). Despite that, the majority does not even attempt to analyze this prong. Instead,
it cites Weaver for the proposition that “the concept of prejudice is defined in different
ways depending on the context in which it appears.” 582 U.S. at 300. The majority refers
to Strickland’s acknowledgment that it did not “establish mechanical rules” and that “the
ultimate focus of inquiry must be on the fundamental fairness of the proceeding whose
result is being challenged.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 696. With those two statements, the
majority finds prejudice by stating the shortcomings it perceives in Nunzio’s performance
“deprived Sweeney of his Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel,
further undermining his right to a fair trial.” Maj. Op at 41. In other words, the majority
believes there is no requirement that had Nunzio done what it believes he should, there is
a reasonable probability of a different outcome. That is not the law and, even in an
unpublished opinion, we should not pretend that it is.
True, Weaver discussed the possibility of replacing Strickland’s rules with a
standard of fairness. But it expressly said it was not replacing Strickland’s results
requirement. Instead, the Court said, “[i]n light of the Court’s ultimate holding, however,
the Court need not decide that question here.” Weaver, 582 U.S. at 300. And since Weaver,
the Court has not created any exception to the rule that a petitioner must show a reasonable
probability of a different result. Thus, Strickland’s second prong remains the law. So,
86
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 87 of 96
Sweeney and the majority’s failure to analyze this prong is fatal. This should be game, set,
match.
2. The Majority’s Sua Sponte Analysis
Undeterred by the insurmountable problems with Sweeney’s ineffective assistance
of counsel claim, the majority formulates a different way to order a new trial for Sweeney.
It concludes that Juror Number 4’s unauthorized visit to the crime scene, the trial judge’s
handling of the revelation of Juror Number 4’s visit and Nunzio’s purported failures
combined to deprive Sweeney of his Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury. And it
declares this a structural error for which no showing of prejudice is required.
It is hard to overstate this judicial overreach. Try as one might, any hint of this
argument is missing from the state and district court proceedings and from the briefs before
us. Sweeney did not make this argument before the Maryland trial court or in his direct
appeal to the Maryland appellate courts. Likewise, he did not make it before the Maryland
PCR court. He didn’t even make it when he sought relief under AEDPA in the district
court. And he did not make it to us on appeal. This novel argument is the majority’s and
the majority’s alone. Regrettably, in charting its own path, the majority violates AEDPA’s
exhaustion requirements and offends party presentation principles.
First, AEDPA. It states that “[a]n application for a writ of habeas corpus on behalf
of a person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court shall not be granted unless
it appears that . . . the applicant has exhausted the remedies available in the courts of the
State.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1)(A). As the district court said, “Sweeney failed to bring a
claim, either on direct appeal or in his application for postconviction review, that the trial
87
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 88 of 96
court deprived him of the right to an impartial jury when it did not conduct a proper
Remmer hearing. Sweeney’s counsel conceded this fact during the postconviction hearing.”
J.A. 493. So, any unexhausted arguments—including the majority’s impartial jury
argument—are not properly before us.
In a habeas case just two years ago, we concluded that the state forfeited an
argument by not raising it on appeal. Stokes v. Stirling, 64 F.4th 131, 136 (4th Cir. 2023),
cert. denied, 144 S. Ct. 377 (2023). We said that “[i]t is well-established that a party’s
failure to raise or discuss an issue in its appellate brief is to be deemed an abandonment of
that issue.” Id. at 137 (quotation marks and citations omitted). We also said that
“[e]nforcing waiver and forfeiture rules against appellees reflects the principle that we
apply [these] rules on a consistent basis so that they provide a substantial measure of
fairness and certainty to the litigants who appear before us.” Id. at 137 (quotation marks
and citations omitted). So much for consistent application.
Even outside of AEDPA, the majority flouts Supreme Court precedent on party
presentation. “In our adversary system, in both civil and criminal cases, in the first instance
and on appeal, we follow the principle of party presentation. That is, we rely on the parties
to frame the issues for decision and assign to courts the role of neutral arbiter of matters
the parties present.” Greenlaw v. United States, 554 U.S. 237, 243 (2008). These are not
empty words. In United States v. Sineneng-Smith, the Supreme Court rebuked the Ninth
Circuit for “depart[ing] so drastically from the principle of party presentation as to
constitute an abuse of discretion.” 590 U.S. 371, 375 (2020). There, our sister circuit spun
an overbreadth argument out of a First Amendment, as-applied argument. Id. at 374. The
88
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 89 of 96
Court condemned this judicial overreach. “[A] court is not hidebound by the precise
arguments of counsel, but the Ninth Circuit’s radical transformation of this case goes well
beyond the pale.” Id. at 380. 10 We should follow Justice Ginsburg’s guidance.
We have our own precedent on party presentation. The majority flouts it too. “We
ordinarily do not consider arguments raised for the first time on appeal.” 1988 Tr. for Allen
Children v. Banner Life Ins. Co., 28 F.4th 513, 528 (4th Cir. 2022). Courts cannot “conjure
up questions never squarely presented to them.” Beaudett v. City of Hampton, 775 F.2d
1274, 1278 (4th Cir. 1985). “[I]t is not the role of the district court to act as a roving
advocate, providing legal arguments to the parties before it.” Aikens v. Ingram, 652 F.3d
496, 506 (4th Cir. 2011) (Diaz, J., concurring). “[A brief’s argument section] must contain
. . . [the] appellant’s contentions and the reasons for them, with citations to the authorities
and parts of the record on which the appellant relies.” Fed. R. App. P. 28(a)(8)(A). To the
majority, none of this seems to matter.
How, then, does the majority justify serving as “roving advocate” for Sweeney? It
cites Frisbie v. Collins, 342 U.S. 519 (1952) for two propositions: (1) “exhaustion ‘is not
10
See also Castro v. United States, 540 U.S. 375, 386 (2003) (Scalia, J., concurring)
(“Our adversary system is designed around the premise that the parties know what is best
for them, and are responsible for advancing the facts and arguments entitling them to
relief.”); Wood v. Milyard, 566 U.S. 463, 473 (2012) (“For good reason, appellate courts
ordinarily abstain from entertaining issues that have not been raised and preserved in the
court of first instance . . . That restraint is all the more appropriate when the appellate court
itself spots an issue the parties did not air below . . . .”); United States v. Burke, 504 U.S.
229, 246 (1992) (Scalia, J., concurring) (“The rule that points not argued will not be
considered is more than just a prudential rule of convenience; its observance, at least in the
vast majority of cases, distinguishes our adversary system of justice from the inquisitorial
one.”).
89
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 90 of 96
rigid and inflexible; [ ] courts may deviate from it and grant relief in special
circumstances,’” Maj. Op. at 16 (citing Frisbie, 342 U.S. at 521); and (2) “[i]f there exist
‘special circumstances [that] require[] prompt federal intervention’ in a particular case, the
court should be able to act,” Maj. Op. at 16–17 (citing Frisbie, 342 U.S. at 522). 11
Armed with Frisbie, the majority then concludes that “[t]he special circumstances
of this case, which will likely never arise again, require our consideration of an issue not
cleanly articulated and exhausted by Sweeney.” Maj. Op. at 17. Those circumstances are
Juror Number 4’s unauthorized visit to the crime scene, the trial judge’s handling of the
revelation of Juror Number 4’s visit and Nunzio’s alleged failures.
The problems with the majority’s approach are numerous. First, although it is a
habeas case, Frisbie antedates AEDPA by 44 years. “AEDPA . . . changed the standards
for granting federal habeas relief.” Schriro v. Landrigan, 550 U.S. 465, 473 (2007). Why
does the majority look back 73 years and ignore post-AEDPA Supreme Court guidance?
If it had not done so, the majority would have found no post-AEDPA permission to
disregard AEDPA. We cannot ignore Congress’ express statutory provisions or decisions
from the Supreme Court requiring their application.
Third, even if the majority’s exhaustion conclusions were sound—and they aren’t—
they still would not justify the majority’s litigating from the bench. The only relief those
arguments would provide Sweeney is the ability for him to bring unexhausted arguments
11
The majority’s discussion of exhaustion and party presentation conflates the two
concepts, collapsing them as if they were one. They are not.
90
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 91 of 96
to us. But Sweeney never argued to us that he was deprived of an impartial jury. The
majority attempts to brush this under the rug by acknowledging it was not “cleanly
articulated.” Maj. Op. at 17. But Sweeney didn’t articulate it at all. It was the majority, and
the majority alone, who developed whole-cloth an argument Sweeney never sniffed at.
Forget Remmer; forget Strickland; forget everything Sweeney’s lawyers and the courts who
have touched this case so far have done. The majority knows better; this case is really about
the Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial.
Fourth, the majority’s special circumstances principle is unworkably squishy. Why
are these circumstances so special? Are there any criteria for that? Or is it just up to the
subjective views of appellate judges? The total absence of standards for this special
circumstances principle is concerning. I fear this approach could be used to avoid the
settled requirements of the law and permit reaching preferred outcomes. I also fear the
uncertainty it will breed for district courts and litigants. 12
This is no way to run a railroad. Appellate review is not a game of moving target.
We review the claims Sweeney actually made, not the ones we prefer he had made.
12
Even if this were a valid principle, why does the majority say these circumstances
will never arise again? The majority seems to supply its answer in a footnote: “It would be
a damning indictment of this nation’s legal system if trials are being so mishandled in more
than the extremely rare case.” Maj. Op. at 17, n.5. But this is circular. How do we know
this was an extraordinary breakdown? Because it would be bizarre for this to happen again.
The majority doesn’t explain why it would be unusual for this to happen again. A juror
does something he isn’t supposed to do, the judge finds out, discusses with counsel how to
proceed and the parties move on. How can we say this will never happen again?
91
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 92 of 96
Sweeney’s only argument regarded ineffective assistance of counsel. Our review should be
limited to that. 13
3. Structural Errors
Finally, in its section on remedy, the majority introduces a whole new reason that
Sweeney deserves a new trial—the errors in Sweeney’s trial were structural. Like almost
13
In addition to raising and deciding an issue no one ever argued or considered
before, the majority nit-picks and misconstrues the record as to the Maryland trial judge in
the same way it did with Nunzio. For example, the majority found the trial judge’s
questions to Juror Number 4 lacking. According to the majority, “[a]ll the judge said to
Juror No. 4 was ‘Tell me what happened,’ and then ‘Is this in any way going to affect your
–’. To begin, neither of these are formulated as questions: the first is an open-ended
directive, and the second was cut off.” Maj. Op. at 23. Why would “[t]ell me what
happened” elicit different information than phrasing it as a question? And so what if the
second question was cut off? The “cutting off” was Juror Number 4’s response of “No sir.
Not at all.” J.A. 191. The fair inference is that Juror Number 4 knew that the judge was
going to ask if it would affect his ability to decide the case based solely on the evidence
presented at trial The majority then lists follow-up questions the Maryland trial court
should have asked. Maj. Op. at 23–24. Like a teacher correcting a student or a CLE seminar
on the most thorough way to take a deposition, the majority literally announces the precise
questions a court of a sovereign state should have asked if it was doing its job the way the
all-knowing Fourth Circuit would do it. The majority also misreads the record when it
faults the judge for acknowledging that “he could separate the jurors in twelve different
rooms.” Maj. Op. at 29. True, as an aside that sounds like sarcasm, the trial judge said
“[u]nless I put them in 12 different rooms” before going on to something else. J.A. 196–
97. Based on that comment, the majority states “this would have avoided the possibility
that Juror No. 4 would share additional information, worsening any taint of the other
eleven, and also ensure that the jury did not resume deliberations until the parties had
resolved how to proceed. However, the judge chose not to do so.” Maj. Op. at 29. The
majority seems to imply that the trial judge should have put the jurors in twelve separate
rooms. This is amazing. Nothing in the record suggests that separating the jurors into
twelve different rooms was actually an option. How many courthouses have twelve
unoccupied, free rooms in which to house jurors? And even if they did, why in the world
would we suggest that was the right course. Do we need twelve bailiffs, too, one for each
juror? I could go on, but hopefully these two examples make the point.
92
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 93 of 96
everything in the majority’s opinion, Sweeney did not argue anything about structural
errors. But even if Sweeney had made this argument, it would still fail.
“[M]ost errors do not automatically render a trial unfair and thus, can be harmless.”
Sherman v. Smith, 89 F.3d 1134, 1137 (4th Cir. 1996). But “certain structural errors are so
severe as to render a trial inherently unfair and thus, should not be subject to harmless error
analysis.” Id. at 1138. “[T]he defining feature of a structural error is that it ‘affect[s] the
framework within which the trial proceeds,’ rather than being ‘simply an error in the trial
process itself.’” Weaver, 582 U.S. at 295 (quoting Arizona v. Fulminante, 499 U.S. 279,
310 (1991)). Critically, “[s]tructural errors affect the ‘entire conduct of the trial from
beginning to end,’ and therefore cannot be harmless.” Sherman, 89 F.3d at 1138 (quoting
Fulminante, 499 U.S. at 309).
But we don’t have a structural error here. “[A] juror site visit ‘does not compare
with the kinds of errors that automatically require reversal of an otherwise valid
conviction.’” Id. (quoting Rose v. Clark, 478 U.S. 570, 579 (1986)). “Unlike the complete
denial of counsel and other structural errors, which affect the ‘entire conduct of the trial
from beginning to end,’ juror site visits can be discrete moments in the course of an
otherwise fair trial.” Id. Neither the majority nor Sweeney argue that the first four days of
Sweeney’s trial were problematic. So, Sherman forecloses the majority’s argument.
How does the majority explain away Sherman? It says that Sherman is different
because that case involved a “single error” from one juror rather than errors from the juror,
counsel and judge. Maj. Op. at 45. This is a thin distinction. Even the errors the majority
finds—which as I have explained are dubious conclusions—are still “discrete moments in
93
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 94 of 96
the course of an otherwise fair trial.” Sherman, 89 F.3d at 1138 (quoting Rose, 478 U.S. at
579). What the majority finds fault with on the fifth day of trial does not “affect the ‘entire
conduct of the trial from beginning to end’” Id. (quoting Fulminante, 499 U.S. at 309).
The majority also relies on Weaver to find a structural error. There, the Supreme
Court noted three ways errors have been deemed structural. “First, an error has been
deemed structural in some instances if the right at issue is not designed to protect the
defendant from erroneous conviction but instead protects some other interest.” Weaver,
582 U.S. at 295. The Court then gave the defendant’s right to conduct his own defense as
an example. Id. The supposedly infringed rights here are Sweeney’s rights to an impartial
jury and confrontation. Maj. Op. at 43. How in the world are those rights not designed to
protect against erroneous conviction? How else is it that these rights are, as the majority
quotes, “‘the heart and lungs’ of liberty[?]” Maj. Op. at 19 (quoting Letter from Clarendon
to W. Pym (Jan. 27, 1766), reprinted in 1 Papers of John Adams 169 (R. Taylor ed. 1977)).
The majority doesn’t even attempt to enlighten us. Indeed, it doesn’t even say what it thinks
these rights are designed to do. The majority simply states its conclusion and moves on.
A second way Weaver said an error can be structural is when the “effects of the error
are simply too hard to measure.” Weaver, 582 U.S. at 295–96. The majority says that the
failure to interrogate the remaining jurors means we cannot know whether the error was
harmless. But again, based on the record evidence, there is no reason to think Juror Number
4 told them any details at all about his site visit. The majority then notes that it would be
speculative to consider the effect of a twelfth juror—so what? Sweeney had the opportunity
94
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 95 of 96
for a new trial with twelve jurors and rejected it. Why would we speculate about the effect
a twelfth juror would have?
“Third, an error has been deemed structural if the error always results in
fundamental unfairness.” Weaver, 582 U.S. at 296. The majority does not even attempt to
conclude that this rationale fits. “We need not discuss this third rationale,” the majority
explains. Maj. Op. at 44.
So, the majority is left with hollow, unexplained distinctions from controlling
caselaw regarding arguments that the majority itself made, giving neither the parties nor
the state courts nor the district court an opportunity to pass upon them. One case the
majority does not attempt to distinguish is Greer v. United States, 593 U.S. 503, 512,
(2021). There, the Supreme Court reversed our United States v. Gary, 954 F.3d 194 (4th
Cir. 2020) decision that the district court committed a structural error by failing to advise
a defendant who pleaded guilty that, if he went to trial, a jury must find that he knew he
was a felon. 593 U.S. at 507. The Supreme Court emphasized that structural errors are
“highly exceptional” and that “discrete defects in the criminal process . . . are not
structural.” Id. Rather than following Greer’s guidance, the majority’s unmoored structural
error analysis here makes the same mistake.
III.
This is a straightforward AEDPA ineffective assistance of counsel case. Following
established law, the outcome is clear—we must affirm the district court. Why then does
the majority go to such tenuous lengths to order a new trial? No one else confessed to the
95
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 96 of 96
crime; no witness recanted; no new DNA evidence was discovered; no juror even came
forward and said Juror Number 4 gave them information about his unauthorized field trip.
Instead, one juror made a mistake that was quickly discovered and addressed. There is no
indication there is an unjust result.
The majority says “[t]his case is extraordinary in its significant breakdown of the
judicial process.” Maj. Op. at 17. On that point, I agree. But the breakdown did not occur
at trial. It occurs in this decision, in which the majority ignores the required standards of
review, flouts Supreme Court precedent and precedent of this Court and litigates from the
bench. I respectfully dissent.
96
Plain English Summary
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 1 of 96 UNPUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
Key Points
01USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 1 of 96 UNPUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
0222-6513 JEREMIAH ANTOINE SWEENEY, Petitioner - Appellant, v.
03GRAHAM, JR., Warden, Western Correctional Institution; ANTHONY G.
04(8:19-cv-01289-PWG) Argued: September 26, 2024 Decided: March 13, 2025 Before GREGORY and QUATTLEBAUM, Circuit Judges, and Terrence W.
Frequently Asked Questions
USCA4 Appeal: 22-6513 Doc: 45 Filed: 03/13/2025 Pg: 1 of 96 UNPUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for Jeremiah Sweeney v. Richard Graham, Jr. in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on March 13, 2025.
Use the citation No. 10356893 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.