                              In the

    United States Court of Appeals
                For the Seventh Circuit
                    ____________________
No. 19-1795
SHAN FIELDMAN,
                                                Petitioner-Appellee,
                                 v.

CHRISTINE BRANNON, Warden,
                                             Respondent-Appellant.
                    ____________________

        Appeal from the United States District Court for the
                    Southern District of Illinois.
        No. 15-cv-1389 — Nancy J. Rosenstengel, Chief Judge.
                    ____________________

   ARGUED JANUARY 16, 2020 — DECIDED AUGUST 12, 2020
                ____________________

   Before FLAUM, MANION, and KANNE, Circuit Judges.
    KANNE, Circuit Judge. On July 23, 2010, Shan Fieldman
climbed into a truck in a Walmart parking lot and told a hit-
man that he wanted his ex-wife and her boyfriend killed. The
hitman was in fact an undercover police officer who vide-
otaped their conversation. Fieldman was charged and tried in
Illinois state court for solicitation of murder for hire.
2                                                     No. 19-1795

    Fieldman defended against the state’s charges by contest-
ing his intent (a necessary element of the offense) to have his
ex-wife and her boyfriend killed. To that end, because a police
informant brokered his meeting with the hitman, Fieldman
sought to testify about his interactions with that informant
during the five weeks before his conversation with the hit-
man. Fieldman believed this testimony would provide the
jury with critical contextual information about his state of
mind and demonstrate that his meeting with the hitman was
a charade.
    But the Illinois trial court did not allow the jury to hear this
testimony because the court concluded it was irrelevant.
Fieldman was convicted and unsuccessfully appealed his
convictions through the Illinois state courts.
    In this federal collateral attack on his conviction, Fieldman
contends the court’s exclusion of his testimony deprived him
of his federal constitutional right to present a complete de-
fense. We agree. The court’s exclusion was contrary to clearly
established federal law confirming a defendant’s right to tes-
tify, on his own behalf, about circumstances bearing directly
on his guilt or innocence or the jury’s ascertainment of guilt.
See Crane v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 683 (1986); Rock v. Arkansas, 483
U.S. 44 (1987). And the exclusion of material portions of his
testimony had a detrimental effect on his interests because it
undercut his entire defense and effectively prevented him
from challenging the state’s strongest evidence. We therefore
affirm the district court’s grant of habeas relief.
                        I. BACKGROUND
  In the summer of 2010, Trina Bennett, a police informant
who was an acquaintance of Fieldman, relayed to Illinois State
No. 19-1795                                                   3

Police Agent Darrell Staﬀord, that a man, Shan Fieldman,
wanted his ex-wife killed. After receiving this tip, Agent Staf-
ford obtained a court order and began recording phone calls
Trina made to Fieldman.
    The first two times Trina tried to reach Fieldman, her calls
went unanswered: she would leave a message, but Fieldman
never called her back. On the third try, however, Fieldman’s
girlfriend answered the phone and handed it to Fieldman. In
that call, Trina arranged an in-person meeting between Field-
man and a “friend” of Trina’s, Earl Candler, who was an un-
dercover Illinois State Police sergeant posing as a hitman. The
meeting would take place later that day, and Trina advised
Fieldman that he would need a $200 down payment.
   On the evening of Friday, July 23, 2010, Fieldman met with
Candler in the parking lot of the Walmart in Pontiac, Illinois.
The meeting took place inside Candler’s truck, which was
equipped with audio and video recording devices.
   Candler opened up the conversation by oﬀering Fieldman
a beer then stating that Trina relayed Fieldman had a prob-
lem. Fieldman agreed and stated his ex-wife, Shelley, was a
“big problem.” Candler responded that he, too, once “had an
ex-wife” who “had an unfortunate accident.” Fieldman told
Candler that he wanted Shelley killed. Candler added that
Trina mentioned Shelley’s boyfriend, Alan Chrossfield. Field-
man replied, “She’s got a boyfriend but um I mean, if he hap-
pens to be there and that’s the only way it can be handled,
then, but if not.”
    Candler pressed Fieldman for details that would aid in
carrying out the murder for hire. Fieldman did not bring Shel-
ley’s picture or address with him to the meeting, but he
4                                                    No. 19-1795

explained she maintained a Facebook account under her
maiden name, where Candler could find her photos. Field-
man described Shelley’s house and car and divulged that
Shelley and Alan spent a fair amount of time drinking in the
garage. But Fieldman advised Candler that the pair would be
out of town that weekend, and that he didn’t want Candler to
act too quickly.
    Fieldman agreed to pay Candler $7500 to murder Shelley
and Alan, which was discounted because Trina owed Candler
a favor. But Fieldman did not bring any money to the meet-
ing. Candler warned Fieldman that failure to pay was not an
option, and, “understand that I will get my money.” To obtain
a down payment, Candler dialed Fieldman’s girlfriend, and
Fieldman arranged to gather whatever cash she carried in her
purse. So, Fieldman left and returned with $100 for a down
payment, explaining it was all he could obtain. At Candler’s
request, Fieldman handed over a written IOU for the remain-
der, payable “at the completion of the job.” Candler informed
Fieldman this would be their final interaction and that, by the
same time next week, Shelley—and possibly Alan—would be
dead.
    Pontiac Police arrested Fieldman later that evening during
a traﬃc stop, and Fieldman was charged and tried in Illinois
state court for the solicitation of murder for hire of Shelley and
Alan. 720 ILCS 5/8-1.2.
    At trial, Shelley testified that she and Fieldman got along
amicably after their divorce in 2002, and Alan and Fieldman
had become friends. Indeed, Alan went to New Orleans to
live with Fieldman while Fieldman provided him with work.
During that time, Fieldman and Alan lived together for about
five or six months. The state also played the video-recording
No. 19-1795                                                     5

of Fieldman’s meeting with Candler, as well as the recorded
phone calls between Trina and Fieldman.
   Fieldman took the stand to testify in his defense. He con-
tended that he did not commit solicitation of murder for hire
because he never intended for Candler to kill Shelley; and un-
der Illinois law, “[a] person commits the oﬀense of solicitation
of murder for hire when, with the intent that the oﬀense of first-
degree murder be committed, he [] procures another to commit
that oﬀense.” 720 ILCS 5/8-1.2(a) (emphasis added). Fieldman
asserted that he only agreed to meet with a hitman because he
was afraid of Trina.
    He testified that Trina had incessantly badgered him over
the five weeks leading up to the meeting, and he felt agreeing
to the meeting was the best way to get Trina to leave him
alone. So, he decided to go to the meeting, gather information,
and relay that information to friends of his who worked at the
Dwight police station a half a block from Shelley’s house.
    When assessing the credibility of Fieldman’s testimony
alongside the audio and video recordings, a rational juror
could reasonably disbelieve Fieldman’s version of events and
convict Fieldman for the solicitation of murder for hire of
Shelley and Alan. But the jury never heard critical testimony
about why Fieldman feared Trina. Because of its importance,
we recount the omitted testimony about Fieldman’s interac-
tions with Trina in the two months leading up to the meeting
with Candler.
6                                                            No. 19-1795

    In late May 2010, Fieldman’s girlfriend, Talia, introduced
him to Trina.1 It’s safe to say that Fieldman characterizes Trina
as a seedy character who was always seeking a way to procure
money from the people around her. Upon finding out that
Fieldman was an electrician, Trina remarked that electricians
make good money and asked specific questions about his
pension and benefits.
     In mid-June, a few weeks after Fieldman met Trina, he and
Talia went to a gathering at Trina’s house. There, she regaled
him with a story of a time she broke into a grocery store and
took cigarettes and lottery tickets. Trina also casually told him
that she robbed an elderly man’s house for fun, duct taped
him to a chair, and then “bl[e]w his brains out” in front of a
child. Fieldman was frightened and sickened by this revela-
tion. Trina continued and asked Fieldman if he had “ever
been mad at anybody,” because she “had people that she
would know could take care of jobs if [he] had that.” Fieldman
responded that he had been mad at people—he was only hu-
man after all—but he had no interest in having anyone killed.
Trina brought up Shelley and asked whether he “ever wanted
anything done to her.” Fieldman said no, but Trina pressed
on, telling him that “I know some people in prison and I know
lots of people. I can get that job done anytime you want.” Star-
tled, Fieldman replied that he wanted no part of that, and
walked away. He and Talia left Trina’s house shortly thereaf-
ter.




    1  Fieldman testified to this information (outside the presence of the
jury) in an offer of proof so that the court could rule on the admissibility
of his testimony.
No. 19-1795                                                   7

    Over the next couple of weeks, Trina repeatedly called Ta-
lia and asked to speak to Fieldman; she also kept “bugging”
Talia for money. Fieldman refused to speak with her and did
not return her calls. Talia, perhaps tired of receiving so many
calls from Trina about needing money, eventually told Field-
man he needed to call her back. Fieldman called Trina back,
and she said that she had people visiting from Chicago “here
to do the job” and that Fieldman needed to meet with her to
give her $200–$300. Fieldman told her, “no way,” and ex-
pressed confusion about her phone call. He exclaimed that
they hadn’t spoken in weeks, and he didn’t know what job
she was talking about or understand why she continued call-
ing him. Trina angrily insisted that he pay her some money
for “the job,” or at least give her some money for a hotel room.
More specifically, she needed a couple hundred dollars. Field-
man refused to give her any money, and he did not meet with
her.
    This pattern continued over the next couple of weeks.
Trina would call Talia, who would then hand the phone to
Fieldman. For example, the day after the phone call about the
hotel, Trina called and said she would do the hit job for next
to nothing; all she needed was to stop by his house and get a
picture of Shelley. Fieldman again declined, said he didn’t
want anything done to Shelley, and he demanded that she
leave him alone. A week later Trina called and asked if Shelley
was on Facebook and said she would look up her information
herself. Fieldman gave her fake names for himself, “Shan
Gills,” and his ex-wife, “Stephanie Gills.”
   Another week later, (about ten days before Fieldman’s
meeting with Candler), Talia underwent surgery. The night
before Talia’s surgery, Fieldman overheard Talia on
8                                                         No. 19-1795

speakerphone with Trina. Trina asked Talia where the sur-
gery was being done, how long she and Fieldman would be
gone, when they would be getting back, and if anybody
would be at their house. Fieldman took Talia to the surgery
and when they returned seven hours later, he noticed their
dog was outside, even though the dog always remained in-
side the house, including that morning. Once inside, Field-
man discovered that money had been stolen. When asked
what went through Fieldman’s mind after this incident, he
said:
    I was starting to get scared because not only she was trying
    to check on Facebook on her own, hire people on her own,
    now she’s … coming into my house looking for pictures and
    trying to take care of this all by herself. I’m not calling her.
    I’m not answering any of her phone calls, not talking to her
    but yet she still keeps pushing and pushing … [M]oney was
    always an issue with her which she talked about from day
    one … I really started fearing for my family and others.
    Trina called Fieldman several times on July 22, this time
on his cell phone, and left a message when he didn’t pick up.
(These are the phone calls recorded by the police). Fieldman
didn’t return her phone call, and Trina called Fieldman once
again on July 23. This time, Talia answered his phone while
Fieldman was picking up mail at the post oﬃce and handed
the phone to him when he exited the building. This was the
call in which Trina arranged for Fieldman to meet with Can-
dler later that evening, which Fieldman agreed to.
    Fieldman initially had no intention to meet with a hitman
in Pontiac on July 23, even after speaking with Trina. This
changed when Fieldman’s plans to go back home, twenty-five
minutes away in Cullom, were put on hold so that Talia could
visit with her terminally ill grandfather who lived in Pontiac.
No. 19-1795                                                   9

At that point, and after giving it some thought, Fieldman de-
cided that if he was ever going to deter Trina, the proposed
meeting with Candler came at an opportune moment: Shelley,
Alan, and their children would be out of town when he met
with Candler. He planned to meet with Candler, gather infor-
mation, and take it to his friends at the Dwight police depart-
ment.
    After the meeting with Candler, Talia called and asked
Fieldman if he would pick up her sons in Pontiac and take
them home so she could stay with her grandfather. As we
know, Fieldman’s plan to go to the Dwight police with infor-
mation did not work as he intended—he was pulled over and
arrested by Pontiac police while driving Talia’s boys back
home.
    The jury heard little of what we’ve just described about the
interactions between Trina and Fieldman in the five weeks
leading up to the meeting. That’s because the trial court be-
lieved the details of his interactions with Trina in the “five,
six, seven weeks” leading up to the meeting were “irrelevant”
to his explanation of why he went to the meeting with Can-
dler and whether Fieldman intended for the pair to be killed.
Instead, the court limited Fieldman to testifying “that he did
not intend to have Shelley killed that day.”
    To be sure, the jury heard some testimony about Field-
man’s fear of Trina; but it lacked essential context about the
interactions that prompted those fears. Here’s what the jury
did hear: Fieldman began to describe one of his early interac-
tions with Trina, telling the jury that Trina had robbed a gro-
cery store. Fieldman’s attorney asked what else Fieldman had
learned in that conversation, but the trial court prevented
Fieldman from finishing the story. Instead, the jury heard that
10                                                  No. 19-1795

Fieldman grew concerned during his conversation because
Trina “told me of just the diﬀerent crimes that she committed
and the fact that she had told me that she had held up a guy
at a house, an old man; and when he wouldn’t listen and got
angry that she duct taped him to a chair.” He also testified
that he gave Trina fake names for himself and his ex-wife; that
he avoided calls from Trina because he knew what they “were
pertaining to” and “didn’t want to call back”; that he decided
to attend with the hitman because he wanted Trina’s “badg-
ering” to be “done and over with”; and that he did not intend
for the hitman to commit the murders, but instead intended
to go to the police.
    In the end, Fieldman’s assertion that he was not guilty re-
lied only on his avowal that he lacked intent—without any
factual context—for Shelley and Alan to be killed. Fieldman
believes the excluded testimony was crucial to his defense
that he did not intend for a hired hand to commit the murders.
    In May 2011, the jury convicted Fieldman on two counts
of solicitation for murder for hire—one count for Shelley and
one count for Alan. Fieldman unsuccessfully appealed his
case, pro se, through the Illinois state court system. So, Field-
man turned to federal court for relief in 2015, this time repre-
sented by counsel. He filed a petition for a writ of habeas cor-
pus, alleging the trial court’s exclusion of his testimony about
his interactions with Trina violated his due-process right to
present a complete defense. The district court agreed with
Fieldman and granted a writ of habeas corpus in 2019. The
state appealed.
No. 19-1795                                                                   11

                                II. ANALYSIS
    Fieldman’s claim raised in his petition for a writ of habeas
corpus is controlled by stringent requirements of the Antiter-
rorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”). 28 U.S.C.
§ 2254(d).2 In order to be entitled to habeas relief, one of
AEDPA’s requirements is that any claim a state court adjudi-
cated on the merits must have ended in a decision, by the state
court, that is “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable appli-
cation of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by
the Supreme Court of the United States.” Id. § 2254(d)(1).3

    2  We apply a de novo standard of review to constitutional claims not
“adjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings.” 28 U.S.C.
§ 2254(d); see Harris v. Thompson, 698 F.3d 609, 623 (7th Cir. 2012). Whether
the Illinois court “adjudicated on the merits” the constitutional question
at issue is a closer call than in other cases. While Fieldman clearly and co-
gently raised, to the Illinois appeals court, the federal constitutional claim
he now raises, that court did not frame its discussion of Fieldman’s argu-
ment as a constitutional due process issue. See People v. Fieldman, 2013 IL
App (4th) 111065-U, ¶¶ 27–31 (quoting People v. Jackson, 2012 IL App (1st)
100398, ¶ 31, which in turn relies on Washington v. Texas, 388 U.S. 14, 19
(1967)). See generally Harrington v. Richter, 562 U.S. 86, 99–100 (2011);
Adorno v. Melvin, 876 F.3d 917, 921 (7th Cir. 2017). But the Illinois appellate
court did not indicate in its opinion that it avoided a decision on the merits
of Fieldman’s federal constitutional challenge. Regardless, Fieldman has
not contended that the non-deferential standard of review applies. See
Knowles v. Mirzayance, 556 U.S. 111, 121 n.2 (2009) (“because Mirzayance
has not argued that § 2254(d) is entirely inapplicable to his claim or that
the state court failed to reach an adjudication on the merits, we initially
evaluate his claim through the deferential lens of § 2254(d)”); Lee v. Avila,
871 F.3d 565, 572 (7th Cir. 2017).
    3 We look to the last court to address a petitioner’s claim on the merits.

Wilson v. Sellers, 138 S. Ct. 1188, 1196 (2018). In this case, the relevant state-
court decision is the Illinois appeals court’s decision in Fieldman, 2013 IL
111065-U.
12                                                    No. 19-1795

This standard is “difficult to meet,” and we give substantial
deference to a state court’s decision. Adorno v. Melvin, 876 F.3d
917, 920 (7th Cir. 2017).
    Before turning to the merits of Fieldman’s claim, we
address one preliminary matter: the state’s argument that
Fieldman’s claim is not the sort we may review in a federal
habeas proceeding. The state contends that an evidentiary
ruling that turns on state law—here, exclusion of evidence
based on relevance—cannot form the basis of a federal habeas
claim. See Morgan v. Krenke, 232 F.3d 562, 566 (7th Cir. 2000).
We disagree.
    Run-of-the-mill state law errors usually do not provide a
basis for federal habeas relief because a habeas petitioner may
obtain relief only if a state court rendered a decision “in vio-
lation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United
States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(a); see Perruquet v. Briley, 390 F.3d 505,
511 (7th Cir. 2004). “To say that a petitioner’s claim is not cog-
nizable on habeas review is thus another way of saying that
his claim ‘presents no federal issue at all.’” Perruquet, 390 F.3d
at 511 (quoting Bates v. McCaughtry, 934 F.2d 99, 101 (7th Cir.
1991)).
    We have, on many occasions, considered a state court’s ev-
identiary rulings when those rulings implicate a federal con-
stitutional question, such as whether the application of a state
evidentiary rule violated a defendant’s right to present a de-
fense. Cf. Kubsch v. Neal, 838 F.3d 845, 853 (7th Cir. 2016) (en
banc); Harris v. Thompson, 698 F.3d 609, 635 (7th Cir. 2012). We
do not sit to correct all errors made by a state court. Instead,
the question posed is whether the damage done to Fieldman’s
defense by the trial court’s exclusion of his testimony violated
his right to present a complete defense. In this context, “the
No. 19-1795                                                   13

last word does not belong to state law; it belongs to the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Con-
stitution.” Kubsch, 838 F.3d at 853–54.
    Weighty constitutional principles are present in this case:
Fieldman has a right—under the federal constitution—to tes-
tify on his own behalf about his lack of intent to commit the
crime for which he was accused, a cornerstone of his funda-
mental constitutional right to a “meaningful opportunity to
present a complete defense.” See Crane, 476 U.S. at 690 (quot-
ing California v. Trombetta, 467 U.S. 479, 485 (1984)); Rock, 483
U.S. at 55–56. Fieldman’s claim is about the scope of that right
and is reviewable in a federal habeas proceeding. We turn
now to the merits of his claim.
   A. Clearly Established Federal Law
    Again, Section 2254 restricts habeas relief to cases in which
the state-court determination “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). Clearly es-
tablished federal law refers to “the governing legal principle
or principles set forth by the Supreme Court at the time the
state court renders its decision.” Lockyer v. Andrade, 538 U.S.
63, 71–72 (2003).
    We first explain why Fieldman’s claim is based on clearly
established federal constitutional law involving the right to
present a defense. We then address why the state trial court’s
exclusion of Fieldman’s testimony was a decision contrary to
this clearly established law.
   The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
and the Compulsory Process Clause of the Sixth Amendment
14                                                     No. 19-1795

guarantee a right to “a meaningful opportunity to present a
complete defense.” Crane, 476 U.S. at 690 (quoting Trombetta,
467 U.S. at 485); see also Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668,
684–85 (1984) (“The Constitution guarantees a fair trial
through the Due Process Clauses, but it defines the basic ele-
ments of a fair trial through the several provisions of the Sixth
Amendment.”). Because the Supreme Court determines the
contours of clearly established federal law, we turn our atten-
tion to the Court’s decisions addressing a defendant’s right to
meaningfully present a complete defense.
    The Constitution guarantees a criminal defendant “an op-
portunity to be heard in his defense,” which the Supreme
Court has said includes the right “to offer testimony.” In re
Oliver, 333 U.S. 257, 273 (1948). Related to one’s opportunity
to be heard is “the right to present the defendant’s version of
the facts as well as the prosecution’s to the jury so it may de-
cide where the truth lies.” Washington v. Texas, 388 U.S. 14, 19
(1967). The Supreme Court later described the “essence” of
this right as “a fair opportunity to defend against the State’s
accusations,” Chambers v. Mississippi, 410 U.S. 284, 294 (1973),
and “a meaningful opportunity to present a complete de-
fense.” Crane, 476 U.S. at 686–87 (quoting Trombetta, 467 U.S.
at 485); accord Holmes v. South Carolina, 547 U.S. 319, 325 (2006).
    “Fundamental” to one’s opportunity to be heard is a de-
fendant’s “right to take the witness stand and to testify in his
[] own defense” and “present his own version of events in his
own words.” Rock, 483 U.S. at 49, 52. The accused’s right to
testify in his defense is “particularly significant, as it is the de-
fendant who is the target of any criminal prosecution.” United
States v. Scheffer, 523 U.S. 303, 315–16 (1998) (quoting Rock, 483
U.S. at 52). Indeed, “the most important witness for the
No. 19-1795                                                    15

defense in many criminal cases is the defendant himself.”
Rock, 483 U.S. at 52. This is especially true when a defendant’s
testimony is “central to the defendant’s claim of innocence,”
Crane, 476 U.S. at 690, or to the jury’s “ascertainment of guilt.”
Chambers, 410 U.S. at 302.
    In sum, the Supreme Court has clearly established that an
integral part of the right to present a complete defense is a
defendant’s right to testify, on his own behalf, about circum-
stances bearing directly on his guilt or innocence or the jury’s
ascertainment of guilt. See Crane, 476 U.S. at 690; Rock, 483 U.S.
at 55–56.
    But this right is not absolute. A defendant’s exercise of his
right to testify about circumstances “central to the defend-
ant’s claim of innocence,” Crane, 476 U.S. at 690, may run
headlong into state evidentiary rules “designed to ensure” the
admission of reliable evidence. Rock, 483 U.S. at 53. Those
rules may prevent the admission of a defendant’s testimony
without offending the defendant’s right to testify. But when
an evidentiary ruling “infring[es] upon a weighty interest of
the accused” and is “arbitrary or disproportionate to the pur-
poses [the rule is] designed to serve,” Holmes, 547 U.S. at 324
(quoting Scheffer, 523 U.S. at 308), then the applicable “state
evidentiary rules” must “yield to the defendant’s fundamen-
tal due-process right to present a defense.” Kubsch, 838 F.3d at
855–56.
    Thus, in order to determine whether a state court’s deci-
sion is contrary to the clearly established standard we identi-
fied above, we first consider whether the state court’s exclu-
sion infringed upon Fieldman’s weighty interest in his consti-
tutional right to present a defense. Then, we determine
whether the court’s exclusion was arbitrary to the purposes
16                                                             No. 19-1795

served by the rule. Finally, we determine whether the ex-
cluded evidence was material and favorable to Fieldman’s de-
fense.4
     B. Contrary to Clearly Established Federal Law
    A state court’s decision is “contrary to” clearly established
federal law, under Section 2254(d)(1), “if the state court ar-
rives at a conclusion opposite to that reached by [the Su-
preme] Court on a question of law or if the state court decides
a case differently than [the Supreme] Court has on a set of
materially indistinguishable facts.” Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S.
362, 412–13 (2000) (brackets in original). But the Court has
never insisted on virtual identity between its precedent and
the state court’s decision. See Panetti v. Quarterman, 551 U.S.
930, 953 (2007). A decision can be contrary to federal law even
if the state court decision “involves a set of facts ‘different

     4 Fieldman relies on United States v. Valenzuela-Bernal, 458 U.S. 858, 872

(1982), to make the following assertion in his briefing: “[t]o establish a vi-
olation of the right to present a defense, a defendant must demonstrate
that the evidence he was not allowed to present would have been favora-
ble and material.” Though the state does not dispute this assertion, it’s not
clear this analysis should apply to a defendant’s own testimony. See Crane,
476 U.S. 683 (no consideration of materiality and favorability); Rock, 483
U.S. 44 (same); Holmes, 547 U.S. 319 (same); Kubsch, 838 F.3d 845 (same);
but see Makiel v. Butler, 782 F.3d 882, 908 (7th Cir. 2015) (considering mate-
riality and favorability); Harris, 698 F.3d 609, 627 (same). And in Rock, the
Court made the following observation: “Logically included in the ac-
cused’s right to call witnesses whose testimony is ‘material and favorable
to his defense,’ United States v. Valenzuela-Bernal, 458 U.S. 858, 867 (1982),
is a right to testify himself, should he decide it is in his favor to do so. In
fact, the most important witness for the defense in many criminal cases is
the defendant himself.” 483 U.S. at 52. For the purposes of this case, we
assume without deciding that the excluded testimony must have been ma-
terial and favorable.
No. 19-1795                                                    17

from those of the case in which the principle was an-
nounced.’” Id. (quoting Lockyer, 538 U.S. at 76). However, we
are mindful that we cannot frame the Court’s decisions at “a
high level of generality.” Nevada v. Jackson, 569 U.S. 505, 512
(2013) (per curiam).
   1. Exclusion Infringed upon a Weighty Interest of the Accused
   With that admonition in mind, we turn to discussing two
cases that bear directly on Fieldman’s claim: Crane v. Kentucky
and Rock v. Arkansas.
   In Crane v. Kentucky, the Court held that the defendant’s
right to testify on his own behalf included the right to testify
about the circumstances surrounding his confession, which
the defendant argued was false and was the result of police
badgering. 476 U.S. at 685. The case involved the testimony of
a sixteen-year-old defendant whom police arrested for his
suspected role in holding up a service station. While detained,
the defendant “out of the clear blue sky” confessed to the
murder of a liquor-store employee and a litany of other local
crimes. Id. at 684. He was charged for the murder, and he
moved to suppress his confession, claiming he had been
“badgered into making a false confession.” Id. at 685. The trial
court disagreed and determined the confession was voluntary
and admissible.
    At trial, the defendant’s “entire defense” rested on an ar-
gument that his “earlier admission of guilt was not to be be-
lieved.” Id. at 691. To that end, he wished to testify about “the
physical and psychological environment in which the confes-
sion was obtained” to “suggest that the statement was unwor-
thy of belief.” Id. at 684. But the application of a Kentucky rule
of evidence prevented the defendant from “develop[ing] in
18                                                   No. 19-1795

front of the jury any evidence about the duration of the inter-
rogation or the individuals who were in attendance.” Id. at
686. Under that rule, once a confession has been found to be
voluntary, evidence supporting that finding may not be intro-
duced at trial to challenge its credibility.
    The Court had “little trouble concluding” that the court’s
“blanket exclusion of the proffered testimony about the cir-
cumstances of [the defendant’s] confession deprived him of a
fair trial” as well as “his fundamental constitutional right to a
fair opportunity to present a defense.” Id. at 687.
    The court gave a number of reasons for its conclusion. It
believed the opportunity to be heard would “be an empty one
if the State were permitted to exclude competent, reliable ev-
idence bearing on the credibility of a confession when such
evidence is central to the defendant’s claim of innocence.” Id.
at 690. Such an exclusion of “exculpatory evidence,” it contin-
ued, “deprives a defendant of the basic right to have the pros-
ecutor’s case encounter and ‘survive the crucible of meaning-
ful adversarial testing.’” Id. at 690–91 (quoting United States v.
Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 656 (1984)).
     Evidence about the “circumstances that prompted his con-
fession” was “especially relevant” in his case. Id. at 691. After
all, the defendant’s “entire defense” was that his “earlier ad-
mission of guilt was not to be believed,” and “introducing ev-
idence of the physical circumstances that yielded the confes-
sion was all but indispensable to any chance of its succeed-
ing.” Id. at 691.
    The following year, in Rock v. Arkansas, the Court similarly
held that the defendant’s right to testify on her own behalf
included the right to present hypnotically refreshed
No. 19-1795                                                     19

testimony about the circumstances leading up to the fatal
shooting of her husband, which she maintained was acci-
dental. 483 U.S. 44. There, a woman was tried for manslaugh-
ter for her husband’s death, and she underwent hypnosis to
try to remember details of the underlying events. After hyp-
nosis sessions, she recalled details about the shooting and
wanted to testify with her refreshed memory. But the Arkan-
sas trial court excluded the hypnotically refreshed testimony.
The defendant challenged this ruling as an infringement of
her right to testify on her own behalf.
    The Supreme Court recognized that the case was “not the
first time” the Court had “faced a constitutional challenge to
a state rule, designed to ensure trustworthy evidence, that in-
terfered with the ability of a defendant to offer testimony.” Id.
at 53. The application of the Arkansas rule here, the Court de-
termined, “had a significant adverse effect on petitioner’s
ability to testify.” Id. at 57. For example, “[i]t virtually pre-
vented her from describing any of the events that occurred on
the day of the shooting,” including “the actual shooting.” Id.
The Court also observed the Arkansas rule prevented the de-
fendant from testifying “that she did not have her finger on
the trigger and that the gun went off when her husband hit
her arm.” Id. This testimony was additionally important be-
cause it would have afforded “greater significance” to expert
testimony about the manner in which the gun was fired. Id.
    The Court concluded that when a defendant’s constitu-
tional “right to testify” is at stake, a state may not apply a rule
of evidence that “permits a witness to take the stand” but then
“arbitrarily excludes material portions” of the witness’s testi-
mony. Id. at 55. The Court explained: “There is no justification
today for a rule that denies an accused the opportunity to
20                                                 No. 19-1795

offer his own testimony” because “the defendant’s veracity …
can be tested adequately by cross-examination.” Id. at 52. The
Court accordingly held that Arkansas’s rule excluding all
hypnotically refreshed testimony impermissibly infringed the
defendant’s right to testify on her own behalf. Id. at 62.
    Fieldman’s challenge meets a comparable end. The exclu-
sion of his testimony implicates the weighty interest identi-
fied in Crane and Rock—the right to a meaningful opportunity
to present a complete defense—and the exclusion of his testi-
mony had a similarly adverse effect.
    Fieldman argues persuasively that the state’s key evidence
against him was tantamount to a recorded confession, like in
Crane. That key evidence is the video-audio recording of
Fieldman’s meeting with Candler, the undercover police of-
ficer, when they talked about arrangements for Candler to kill
Shelley and Alan. We agree that the video played a central
role in the state’s case. In the trial court’s words, that video
“stands out more than any other” evidence; that it was
“[c]hilling is really an understatement.”
    To negate this highly incriminating video evidence,
Fieldman’s “entire defense” consisted of convincing the jury,
through testimony about his escalating and alarming
interactions with Trina, that he did not intend for Candler to
carry out the murders. Crane, 476 U.S. at 691. Fieldman’s lack
of intent to commit the murder was a crucial part of his
defense because under Illinois law, “a person commits
solicitation of murder for hire when, with the intent that the
offense of first-degree murder be committed, he [] procures
another to commit that offense.” 720 ILCS 5/8-1.2(a)
(emphasis added). This means that the state must prove intent
beyond a reasonable doubt, and the accused may defend
No. 19-1795                                                     21

against this charge by introducing evidence that he lacked the
intent to commit first degree murder. See People v. Eaglin, 224
Ill. App. 3d 668, 671 (3d Dist. 1992). Whether the state’s proof
of Fieldman’s intent “survive[d] the crucible of meaningful
adversarial testing” was for the jury to decide. Crane, 476 U.S.
at 690–91 (quoting Cronic, 466 U.S. at 656).
    But the adversarial setting here was skewed. Fieldman’s
excluded testimony about the circumstances that prompted
his actions and statements in the video was “especially rele-
vant” because Fieldman’s “entire defense” rested on an argu-
ment that his statements to Candler were a charade. Crane,
476 U.S. at 691. To show that those statements were a charade,
Fieldman sought to testify about the sequence of his escalat-
ing interactions with Trina. These interactions, Fieldman as-
serted, were crucial to his state of mind and showed that he
feared Trina would harm him or his family if he didn’t meet
with Candler. The jury did not hear any of the following ma-
terial portions of Fieldman’s testimony:
      Soon after Fieldman met Trina, she told him about her
       frightening conduct, including a gruesome murder in
       which she taped an elderly man to a chair and shot him
       dead in front of a child, and he feared Trina based on these
       crimes;
      Trina asked whether Fieldman had ever been mad at any-
       body because she knew people who would “take care of
       [it],” specifically mentioning his ex-wife;
      Trina then began asking for information about Fieldman’s
       ex-wife;
      Over the next couple of weeks, Trina persisted in contact-
       ing Fieldman and leaving voice messages for him, which
       he ignored;
22                                                   No. 19-1795

      Trina attempted to set up meetings between Fieldman and
       hitmen in an attempt to obtain money from him;
      Trina angrily demanded several hundred dollars from
       Fieldman for people who had come in from Chicago to “do
       the job,” but he refused;
      Trina offered to kill his ex-wife herself and said she could
       find her picture on Facebook without Fieldman’s help;
      Trina knew where Fieldman lived with Talia and her sons;
      Fieldman believed Trina was the person who broke into his
       house and took money shortly before Fieldman’s meeting
       with the hitman;
      Trina continued to initiate conversations with him about
       killing his ex-wife after he had told her he had no interest
       in doing so;
      As a result of these interactions, Fieldman grew increas-
       ingly concerned for his safety, as well as the safety of his
       family, and believed that the only way to resolve the situ-
       ation was to go to the meeting with Candler before going
       to the police.
    In response, the state argues that Fieldman was not de-
prived of his right to a meaningful opportunity to present a
defense because just a “portion” of Fieldman’s testimony was
excluded. The state points out that he was allowed to “testify
in front of the jury that on the day that this happened he felt
that he was being pushed by Trina Bennett, he felt uncomfort-
able, [and] he was concerned because he didn’t know what
she was going to do.” He also testified that he gave Trina false
names for himself and his ex-wife; that he avoided Trina’s
calls because he knew what they “were pertaining to” and
“didn’t want to call back” because he did not want anybody
killed; that he never intended to meet with the hitman despite
No. 19-1795                                                    23

twice saying that he would; that he decided to meet with the
hitman only because he wanted the badgering “done and over
with”; that he was “scared” when he met Candler because he
believed he “was in the truck with a killer” and “in over his
head”; that he was “concerned” for himself and planned to
“get some information and go to the police” so they could ap-
prehend the hitman before he committed the murders; and
that he did not go to the police until the following morning
because he had to take Talia’s children home so she could stay
with her sick grandfather. This testimony, the state surmises,
was suﬃcient for Fieldman to present his defense that he
lacked the requisite intent to be guilty.
    We disagree. The court limited Fieldman to discussing his
state of mind on the date he met with Candler, which “virtu-
ally prevented” him from testifying about crucial events un-
derlying the state’s strongest piece of evidence. Rock, 482 U.S.
at 55. Fieldman’s interactions with Trina, and how those in-
teractions affected his state of mind, were essential to explain-
ing why Fieldman met with and hired a hitman if he did not
intend for Candler to kill Shelley and Alan. His testimony was
“indispensable” to convince the jury to disbelieve the chilling
scene that unfolded on video. Crane, 476 U.S. at 691. Far from
tertiary or collateral to Fieldman’s defense, the excluded tes-
timony about events leading up to the recorded meeting went
straight to the heart of his claim of innocence.
    Like in Crane, the jury lacked vital context to weigh Field-
man’s credibility about his lack of intent. In the face of the
videotape, and without Fieldman’s testimony, the jury had no
factual basis to credit his bare assertions that he did not intend
for Candler to kill Shelley and Alan. The Court’s statement
about the jury’s predicament in Crane is an apt comparison to
24                                                       No. 19-1795

the jury’s deliberations in Fieldman’s case, because the video
was nearly as inculpatory as a confession:
     Indeed, stripped of the power to describe to the jury the cir-
     cumstances that prompted his confession, the defendant is
     effectively disabled from answering the one question every
     rational juror needs answered: If the defendant is innocent,
     why did he previously admit his guilt?
Id. at 689.
    Likewise, the jury in Fieldman’s case needed a critical
question answered: If Fieldman is innocent because he lacked
intent that Shelley and Alan be killed, why did he apparently
hire a hitman to kill them? To provide a sufficient answer,
Fieldman needed to present to the jury his excluded testi-
mony about his reasons for his video-captured conduct. But
the trial court excluded the heart of this testimony, resulting
in a significantly adverse effect on Fieldman’s ability to mean-
ingfully present a defense. Accordingly, the trial court’s ex-
clusion was contrary to the weighty interest clearly estab-
lished by Crane and Rock. Holmes, 547 U.S. at 324.
   2. Arbitrary or Disproportionate to the Rule’s Evidentiary Pur-
pose
    Having established that the excluded testimony was cru-
cial to Fieldman’s defense, we turn now to whether the court’s
application of the relevance rule was arbitrary or dispropor-
tionate to the rule’s purpose of ensuring relevant evidence is
presented to the jury. Id.
    When excluding Fieldman’s testimony about his interac-
tions with Trina in the four to five weeks before his meeting
with Candler, the trial court relied primarily on the eviden-
tiary rule concerning relevance. See Ill. R. Evid. 401 (eff. Jan. 1,
No. 19-1795                                                    25

2011) (“‘Relevant evidence’ means evidence having any ten-
dency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence
to the determination of the action more probable or less prob-
able than it would be without the evidence.”). The court fo-
cused on the time frame of Trina’s interactions with Fieldman
and determined that events occurring several days before
Fieldman’s meeting with the hitman were not relevant to
Fieldman’s intent on the evening he met with Candler. For
example, the court stated that Fieldman’s interactions with
Trina had no bearing on his intent: “it has absolutely nothing
to do with whether or not he intended Earl Candler to kill his
wife.”
    When the Illinois appellate court addressed Fieldman’s ar-
gument that the trial court’s exclusion violated his right to
due process under the Federal Constitution, the Illinois appel-
late court stated that “[a] defendant ‘is entitled to an oppor-
tunity to present his version of events within the confines of
our rules of evidence.’” See Fieldman, 2013 IL App (4th)
111065-U, ¶ 30 (quoting People v. Jackson, 2012 IL App (1st)
100398, ¶ 31). The appellate court concluded that the trial
court’s application of Illinois’s relevance rule to exclude Field-
man’s testimony about his fear of Trina was not an abuse of
discretion. Id.
    Notably, neither the trial court nor the appellate court en-
gaged in a balancing analysis, considering the importance of
Fieldman’s testimony to his defense against the evidentiary
rules; nor did they consider the adverse effect of the ruling on
Fieldman’s opportunity to present a defense. Cf. Holmes, 547
U.S. at 329–30.
    Because the Illinois appellate court relied on principles of
relevance, we limit our discussion of the state’s interests
26                                                             No. 19-1795

advanced by the Illinois evidentiary rule that “[e]vidence
which is not relevant is not admissible.” Ill. R. Evid. 402 (eff.
Jan. 1, 2011). We begin with the Court’s observation that states
may exclude evidence that is repetitive, marginally relevant,
or presents an undue risk of harassment, prejudice, or confu-
sion of the issues. Crane, 476 U.S. at 689–90. Relevance is a rule
of efficiency, designed to streamline evidence and to focus the
jury on evidence that makes the question of guilt more or less
probable. Cf. People v. Ward, 101 Ill. 2d 443, 455–56 (1984). The
rule aims to limit irrelevant or marginally probative facts so
as not to waste judicial resources or to confuse or prejudice
the jury.
    There is no dispute that relevance requirements serve a le-
gitimate purpose; but it is not enough to show that a rule
serves a legitimate state interest. Instead, evaluating whether
the rule infringes a defendant’s rights “demands [] particular-
ized scrutiny of the application of the rule in each case,” so
that an “evidentiary exclusion[]” does not “sweep far more
broadly” than purposes underlying the rule would justify,
and, in that way, apply in an arbitrary manner. Harris, 698
F.3d at 635.
    In considering whether the application of a rule operates
in an arbitrary manner, we have highlighted some considera-
tions the Supreme Court deemed pertinent to that inquiry.
Kubsch, 838 F.3d at 858.5 Arbitrariness “might be shown by a


     5We do not believe the five-factor framework announced in Kubsch v.
Neal is directly applicable to our review in Fieldman’s case. 838 F.3d at
858. Kubsch announced its framework when discussing Chambers v. Mis-
sissippi, 410 U.S. 284 (1973), and applied principles distilled from Chambers
and related cases to a state’s application of its hearsay rule to exclude crit-
ical witness testimony. But neither Chambers nor Kubsch relied on a
No. 19-1795                                                           27

lack of parity between the prosecution and defense; the state
cannot regard evidence as reliable enough for the prosecu-
tion, but not for the defense.” Id. Arbitrariness can also be
shown in a court’s “refusal to consider corroborating circum-
stances, an unexplained departure from an established line of
decisions, or an assumption about the relative weight of evi-
dence (as in Crane).” Id.
   We think that the trial court’s application of Illinois’s rele-
vance rule operated in an arbitrary manner because of: (1) a
lack of parity between the government and defense, and (2)
an unexplained departure from Illinois decisions.
    We begin with parity as it relates to the court’s limitation
on the time frame relevant to Fieldman’s state of mind. The
trial court mostly limited Fieldman to discussing his state of
mind on the date of the meeting with the hitman, reasoning
that events occurring between Trina and Fieldman several
months (but primarily one month) before his meeting with
the hitman could not be relevant to Fieldman’s intent on the
evening when he met with Candler.
    Compare this with the time frame considered relevant to
support the state’s theory of Fieldman’s motive: that
Fieldman wanted to have Shelley killed because she asked a
court to increase his child-support payments. For example,
the court permitted the state to present the following
evidence, about Fieldman’s motive, some of which dated back


defendant’s right to testify in his own defense, so we do not rely on a
framework tailored to address a different kind of evidentiary exclusion.
However, some of Kubsch contains a helpful, general discussion of circum-
stances in which a state evidentiary rule should yield to a defendant’s
right to present a defense.
28                                                  No. 19-1795

to March 2010 (four months before his meeting with the
hitman): in May, Shelley filed a petition to modify Fieldman’s
child-support payments; in March and into June, Fieldman
and Shelley were in and out of court for past-due child
support; and in March and April, Fieldman and Shelley
exchanged text messages about their child-support disputes.
    This amounted to lack of parity between the time frame in
which evidence was relevant to Fieldman’s intent. For the
prosecution, evidence about events in the months before
Fieldman’s meeting with Candler was relevant to his intent.
But for the defense, evidence about events in the weeks before
that meeting was deemed irrelevant to Fieldman’s intent. Cf.
Kubsch, 838 F.3d at 858.
    By itself, this lack of parity makes the court’s application
of the evidentiary rule to Fieldman’s contextual testimony ar-
bitrary. But the arbitrariness of the court’s decision is even
more pronounced in light of its apparent and unexplained de-
parture from a line of decisions—decisions concerning the rel-
evance of a defendant’s own testimony about his intent. For
example, in People v. Perez, 209 Ill. App. 3d 457, 466 (1st Dist.
1991), the Illinois appellate court explained that “[w]here the
intention, motive or belief of the accused is material to the is-
sue, he should be allowed to testify directly to that fact, and
to have the circumstances surrounding the act considered in
connection with his testimony.” Accord People v. Biella, 374 Ill.
87, 89 (1940) (“In criminal cases where the intention, the mo-
tive or belief of the accused is material to the issue, he is al-
lowed to testify directly to the fact.”). In the same vein, the
appellate court in People v. O’Toole, 226 Ill. App. 3d 974, 988
(4th Dist. 1992), confirmed that out-of-court statements used
for purposes other than establishing the truth of the matter
No. 19-1795                                                   29

asserted may be admissible—for example “to show or explain
the course of conduct” because “the truth of the out-of-court
statement is not at issue.” We fail to see how the trial court’s
decision in Fieldman’s case is reconcilable with this line of de-
cisions.
    To the extent the court was concerned about traditional
purposes underlying relevance rules (such as delay, confu-
sion, prejudice, or reliability), an avenue other than a whole-
sale exclusion of Fieldman’s contextual testimony was availa-
ble to test its reliability. His testimony could have been tested
through cross-examination by the state. And if the court was
concerned with the reliability of Fieldman’s testimony about
his interactions with Trina, she was present in the courthouse
and available to testify. “Sorting out truthful from untruthful
testimony is the essence of the jury’s function,” Harris, 698
F.3d at 638, and at the end of the day, the jury would have
been fully capable of determining the weight, reliability, and
trustworthiness of Fieldman’s testimony. Instead, the jury—
charged with determining whether Fieldman intended the hit
to be carried out—was left to deliberate without crucial testi-
mony about the reasons behind Fieldman’s meeting with
Candler. Absent from their consideration was Fieldman’s de-
scription of his fear of Trina, which rose during five weeks of
Trina’s increasingly aggressive behavior toward Fieldman.
    In sum, when an accused’s testimony is essential to the
jury’s determination of guilt or innocence, the right to present
that testimony is part of the defendant’s right to testify in his
own defense. The court’s relevance ruling excluding Field-
man’s testimony central to the issue of his intent gravely “in-
fring[ed] upon a weighty interest of the accused,” Holmes, 547
U.S. at 324 (quoting Scheffer, 523 U.S. at 308). And it
30                                                  No. 19-1795

“operate[d] in an arbitrary manner in the case at hand,”
Kubsch, 838 F.3d at 858, because it resulted in a lack of parity
between Fieldman and the State and departed from Illinois
law. Accordingly, we conclude the state court’s decision was
contrary to clearly established federal law.
     3. Material and Favorable
     Finally, we assume without deciding, that the excluded
evidence must be “material and favorable” to Fieldman’s de-
fense. United States v. Valenzuela-Bernal, 458 U.S. 858, 867
(1982); see also Harris, 698 F.3d at 627. The exclusion of testi-
mony is material if there is a reasonable likelihood, when
viewing the testimony “in the context of the entire record,”
that the testimony could have affected the judgment of the
trier of fact. Valenzuela-Bernal, 458 U.S. at 868 (quoting Moore
v. Illinois, 408 U.S. 786, 112–13 (1972)). A reasonable probabil-
ity does not mean that the defendant would have more likely
than not received a different verdict. Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S.
419, 434 (1995). Rather, the inquiry asks whether the exclusion
of evidence undermines our confidence in the outcome of
trial. Id. We conclude that the exclusion of the testimony was
material and favorable to Fieldman’s defense.
    We refrain from repeating our previous analysis about the
material—indeed critical—importance of Fieldman’s testi-
mony to his defense. But we make several additional points
about this testimony as it relates to the evidence the jury re-
ceived.
   Because of the video evidence, the state had a strong case
on all elements of the charged crime except intent. The state
presented evidence about child-support disputes between
Shelley and Fieldman to show why Fieldman may have
No. 19-1795                                                   31

wanted to have Shelley killed. But Fieldman testified that
those disputes were resolved by mid-June, nearly a month
prior to his meeting with the hitman. That chipped away at
the state’s proof of Fieldman’s motive to have Shelley and
Alan killed.
    Further eroding the state’s proof of motive, Fieldman and
Shelley both testified that the two had gotten along well in the
eight years since their divorce. Shelley testified that Fieldman
never acted violently toward her during their marriage. She
also testified that, several years earlier, Fieldman provided
Alan with a job and a place to live with Fieldman for six
months when Alan was out of work. Fieldman testified that
he thought of Shelley and Alan as his friends.
    But what was the jury to make of testimony about the
trio’s amicable relationship when faced with a video of Field-
man hiring someone to kill Shelley and Alan? A rational juror
would have little reason to credit Fieldman’s bare-bones as-
sertion that he only attended the meeting with Candler be-
cause Trina badgered him. Why would the jury credit Field-
man’s testimony that he felt pushed and badgered by Trina
without any explanation about the circumstances giving rise
to his fear? Similarly, why would the jury credit his claim that
he did not want Shelley and Alan killed without testimony
about Trina’s actions that made him feel like going to the
meeting was necessary to protect himself and his family?
Fieldman’s excluded testimony would have provided the fac-
tual basis for the jury to credit Fieldman’s defense; without it,
Fieldman was left with a feeble denial that he never intended
for Candler to murder Shelley and Alan.
   Finally, the excluded contextual testimony could have lent
greater significance to testimony that Fieldman made a last-
32                                                  No. 19-1795

minute decision to meet with Candler at the Walmart in Pon-
tiac. Cf. Rock, 483 U.S. at 57. Fieldman testified that, although
he agreed on the phone to meet with Candler, he never in-
tended to follow through with the meeting. For one, he lived
in Cullom, nearly a half an hour away from Pontiac. But he
changed his mind after a last-minute change in circumstances
brought him to Pontiac. About an hour and a half before his
meeting with Candler, Fieldman and Talia found out that her
grandfather was nearing death. So, they went to her grandfa-
ther’s house in Pontiac to say their goodbyes. There was un-
derstandably a “lot of commotion” at the grandfather’s house
and Fieldman became “uncomfortable being there.” On a
whim, he decided that if he was ever going to get Trina off of
his back, that was the time. He was in Pontiac, and he knew
that Shelley, Alan, and the kids were out of town and out of
harm’s way. And, no matter what happened, he planned to
“go to the police” after the meeting. But, before Fieldman
could even attempt to make his way to the police, Talia called
and asked him to pick her boys up and take them home so
that she could stay with her grandfather. Fieldman agreed;
but he was pulled over and arrested while taking them back
home.
    The interactions between Trina and Fieldman leading up
to his meeting with Candler may well have swayed the jury’s
deliberations. But the jury never heard critical testimony,
which, if credited, could have permitted the jury to find that
Fieldman lacked the requisite intent to be guilty. As in Kubsch,
“the jury should have been given the chance to evaluate this
case based on all the evidence, rather than on the basis of a
truncated record that omitted the strongest evidence the de-
fense had.” 838 F.3d at 861. We don’t ultimately know
whether the jury would have credited Fieldman’s defense;
No. 19-1795                                                  33

but we do believe Fieldman’s full testimony “could reasona-
bly be taken to put the whole case in such a different light as
to undermine confidence in the verdict.” Kyles, 514 U.S. at 435.
As such, Fieldman’s excluded testimony was material and fa-
vorable to his defense.
                       III. CONCLUSION
    We AFFIRM the district court’s judgment granting habeas
relief.
