                                                               NOT PRECEDENTIAL


                      UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                           FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
                                ____________

                                     No. 18-2062
                                    ____________

                              RONDELL SLAUGHTER,
                                   Appellant

                                           v.

   SUPERINTENDENT PHOENIX SCI; THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY OF THE
 COUNTY OF PHILADELPHIA; THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF
                        PENNSYLVANIA
                          ____________

                    On Appeal from the United States District Court
                       for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
                               (D.C. No. 2-16-cv-04143)
                      District Judge: Honorable Joel H. Slomsky
                                    ____________

                                 Argued March 5, 2020

      Before: SMITH, Chief Judge, HARDIMAN, and KRAUSE, Circuit Judges.

                                 (Filed: June 10, 2020)

Stephen W. Kirsch
Arianna J. Freeman
Leigh M. Skipper
Joel Mandelman (Argued)
Federal Community Defender Office
for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
Suite 540 West—Curtis Center
601 Walnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106
        Counsel for Appellant Rondell Slaughter
Joshua S. Goldwert (Argued)
Max C. Kaufman
Nancy Winkelman
Carolyn Engel Temin
Lawrence S. Krasner
Philadelphia County Office of the District Attorney
3 South Penn Square
Philadelphia, PA 19107
      Counsel for Appellees Superintendent Phoenix SCI, District Attorney of
      Philadelphia, and Attorney General of Pennsylvania

                                      ____________

                                        OPINION*
                                      ____________

HARDIMAN, Circuit Judge.

       Rondell Slaughter appeals an order of the District Court denying his petition for

writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. We will affirm.

                                             I1

       A Pennsylvania state court jury convicted Slaughter of arson, criminal conspiracy,

and aggravated assault. The jury began its deliberations on a Thursday. The next day, the

jury notified the court that it was at an impasse on some charges, so the court recessed for

the weekend. On Monday, the jury returned with one juror absent. Because the absent

juror was sick, the court substituted an alternate juror over Slaughter’s counsel’s

objection. When the recomposed jury reached another impasse on Tuesday, the court




       *
        This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7
does not constitute binding precedent.
       1
        The District Court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 2241 and 2254(a). We
have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291 and 2253(a).
                                             2
encouraged it to continue deliberations. The jury reached a verdict the next day. The

court sentenced Slaughter to 35 to 70 years’ imprisonment.

       After exhausting his direct appeal rights, Slaughter sought relief under

Pennsylvania’s Post-Conviction Relief Act (PCRA). The Court of Common Pleas

appointed counsel, who filed two amended PCRA petitions. The court ultimately

dismissed Slaughter’s Second Amended PCRA Petition.

       The Pennsylvania Superior Court appointed new counsel and allowed Slaughter to

appeal the order denying his Second Amended PCRA petition. On appeal, Slaughter

argued his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to properly object to “the replacement

of an already dismissed alternate juror after the juror had started deliberations.” App.

618–19. And although he also claimed his counsel on direct appeal was ineffective, he

gave no factual or legal basis for this claim.

       The Superior Court held that Slaughter’s trial counsel was ineffective, reversed the

lower court’s order dismissing his PCRA petition, and granted him a new trial.

Commonwealth v. Slaughter, 2014 WL 10588398, at *6 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2014). The

Superior Court’s decision was based on Commonwealth v. Saunders, 686 A.2d 25 (Pa.

Super. Ct. 1996), which held that the Pennsylvania Rules of Criminal Procedure do not

authorize a trial court to replace a juror after deliberations have begun. Id. at *4. Saunders

also held that “where the trial court has substituted an alternate juror after deliberations

have begun, there is a presumption of prejudice to the defendant.” Saunders, 686 A.2d at

28. To overcome this presumption, a trial court must: (1) question the alternate and

remaining jurors to ensure the alternate has not been exposed to improper outside

                                                 3
influences and deliberations can begin anew; and (2) instruct the recomposed jury that the

principal juror was discharged for personal reasons only and that deliberations must begin

anew. Id. at 29. Because Slaughter’s counsel did not properly object when the trial court

failed to adequately question the alternate and remaining jurors, the Superior Court

ordered a new trial.

       The Commonwealth appealed and the Pennsylvania Supreme Court vacated the

Superior Court’s order in a summary per curiam order. Commonwealth v. Slaughter, 120

A.3d 992 (Pa. 2015). It remanded the case to the Superior Court so it could “reevaluate

[Slaughter’s] ineffectiveness claim under the Pierce/Strickland standard requiring a

showing of actual prejudice . . . .” Id. On remand, Slaughter filed a supplemental brief

that largely mirrored his prior appellate brief before the Superior Court. Slaughter again

claimed his trial counsel was ineffective “for failing to object to the replacement of an

already dismissed alternate juror after the juror had started deliberations.” App. 636. He

mentioned appellate counsel only in passing. Applying Strickland, the Superior Court

held Slaughter did not show he was prejudiced by the trial court’s failure to question the

jurors. Commonwealth v. Slaughter, 2016 WL 298642, at *6–7 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2016). The

Pennsylvania Supreme Court denied review.

       Slaughter then filed a pro se petition for writ of habeas corpus in federal court

under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), 28 U.S.C.

§ 2254. The District Court referred the case to a magistrate judge, who recommended

denial of Slaughter’s claims for relief. Slaughter filed objections to the Report and

Recommendation (R&R), but the District Court approved and adopted the R&R and

                                             4
denied Slaughter’s petition. Slaughter appealed and this Court granted a certificate of

appealability.

                                                II

          Our certificate of appealability asked the parties to address whether the state courts

reasonably applied Strickland when deciding (1) whether trial counsel was ineffective for

failing to object to the trial court’s jury instruction in seating an alternate juror after the

jury had started deliberations; and (2) whether appellate counsel was ineffective for

failing to challenge the trial court’s decision to seat an alternate juror after deliberations

had begun and its jury instruction in seating the alternate juror. The District Court found

that Slaughter procedurally defaulted on the first issue. And because Slaughter did not

properly raise the second issue in his habeas petition, the District Court did not consider it

either.

          We disagree that Slaughter defaulted on the first issue. We will nevertheless

affirm the District Court because the state court reasonably applied Strickland. See 28

U.S.C. § 2254(d); Simmons v. Beard, 590 F.3d 223, 231 (3d Cir. 2009). As for the second

issue, after reviewing the record, Slaughter’s counsel was “constrained to concede that

[the ineffective assistance of appellate counsel claim was not fairly presented to the state

courts].” Oral Argument at 6:25–38, available at https://www.ca3.uscourts.gov/oral-

argument-recordings; see id. at 1:27–38, 3:07–24. We commend counsel for his candor.

His ethical duty required this concession because Slaughter did not properly raise an

ineffective assistance of appellate counsel claim in the state courts, in his habeas petition,

or in his motion for a certificate of appealability. See Pa. R. Prof’l Conduct 3.1 cmt. 2

                                                5
(“What is required of lawyers, however, is that they inform themselves about the facts of

their clients’ cases and the applicable law and determine that they can make good faith

arguments in support of their clients’ positions.”).

                                              A

       Slaughter raised the issue of whether his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to

object to the trial court’s jury instruction in seating an alternate juror. He claimed in his

PCRA appellate briefs that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to “properly object” to

the court’s decision to empanel the alternate juror. App. 619–21. Although this claim

lacks specificity, a court could reasonably construe it to be a claim challenging trial

counsel’s failure to object to the lack of the jury instruction required by Saunders.

Because Slaughter properly raised this claim and the state court adjudicated it on the

merits, we review it under AEDPA’s deferential standard. So the question is not whether

the state court’s holding was wrong, but whether it was reasonable. Indeed, “even a

strong case for relief does not mean the state court’s contrary conclusion was

unreasonable.” Harrington v. Richter, 562 U.S. 86, 102 (2011).

       Slaughter claims the state courts unreasonably applied Strickland in determining

that he failed to show his trial counsel was ineffective. Under Strickland’s familiar two-

part test, we consider whether counsel’s performance was deficient and, if so, whether it

prejudiced Slaughter. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984). But “[t]he

standards created by Strickland and § 2254(d) are both ‘highly deferential,’ and when the

two apply in tandem, the review is ‘doubly’ so.” Richter, 562 U.S. at 105 (quoting

Knowles v. Mirzayance, 556 U.S. 111, 123 (2009)). We are “not authorized to grant

                                               6
habeas corpus relief simply because we disagree with the state court’s decision or

because we would have reached a different result if left to our own devices.” Werts v.

Vaughn, 228 F.3d 178, 197 (3d Cir. 2000) (citing Matteo v. Superintendent, SCI Albion,

171 F.3d 877, 888 (3d Cir. 1999)).

       On remand from the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, the Superior Court considered

whether Slaughter could establish that his trial counsel caused him actual prejudice when

counsel failed to properly object to the substitution of the alternate juror. Slaughter, 2016

WL 298642, at *6–7. The court held Slaughter did not show that the alternate—or any

other—juror was exposed to any outside influence. Id. at *7. Instead, Slaughter proffered

“mere speculation,” which cannot establish actual prejudice. Id.; see Strickland, 466 U.S.

at 694 (a petitioner must establish “a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s

unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different”).

       We hold the Superior Court’s decision was not unreasonable because Slaughter

failed to show that any jurors had been exposed to outside influence or that the

deliberations were otherwise tainted by the belated substitution. Instead, he assumed

prejudice by the mere fact that the recomposed jury reached a verdict after the original

jury deadlocked on some issues. This assumption ignores that the recomposed jury

deadlocked, just like the original jury, before ultimately returning its guilty verdict. It also

ignores the possibility that the original jury, if given more time, likewise may have

reached the same verdict after the impasse. For these reasons, we conclude that

Slaughter’s first argument is unavailing.



                                               7
                                               B

       Next, we address Slaughter’s ineffective assistance of appellate counsel claim. We

will deny relief because, as his counsel conceded at argument, Slaughter did not fairly

present his claim to the state courts. See Picard v. Connor, 404 U.S. 270, 275 (1971).

       “A petitioner can ‘fairly present’ his claim through: (a) reliance on pertinent

federal cases; (b) reliance on state cases employing constitutional analysis in like fact

situations; (c) assertion of the claim in terms so particular as to call to mind a specific

right protected by the Constitution; and (d) allegation of a pattern of facts that is well

within the mainstream of constitutional litigation.” Nara v. Frank, 488 F.3d 187, 198 (3d

Cir. 2007), as amended (June 12, 2007). Slaughter did not satisfy any of these

requirements.

       It’s important to note that Slaughter did properly raise an ineffective assistance of

appellate counsel claim in his Second Amended PCRA Petition in the Court of Common

Pleas. There he claimed: “Petitioner’s appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to

raise on appeal the issue of the Court’s refusal to accept or record the first jury’s verdict

and the Court’s empaneling a new jury after the original one had begun deliberations.”

App. 595 (emphasis added). He further alleged, “there could have been no rational,

strategic or tactical reason for counsel to have failed to have raised the [Saunders] issue[]

on appeal.” App. 602. By raising it properly in the Court of Common Pleas, we know

Slaughter—who was represented by counsel at the time—understood this claim and how

to present it.



                                               8
       But Slaughter’s claims changed in the Superior Court, where he mentioned

appellate counsel only twice. In a point heading, he claimed:

       The Appellant was denied due process and effective assistance of counsel
       by both trial and appellate counsel where there was a failure to object to
       and/or request that the jury’s partial verdict be recorded before the trial
       court terminated deliberations and seated the already dismissed alternate
       juror to begin new deliberations.

App. 618 (initial brief), 636 (on remand). He then directed his argument entirely at trial

counsel before making another passing reference to appellate counsel:

       [T]he trial court’s post-submission substitution of the alternate . . . violated
       the rule of law in Saunders. Counsel should have properly preserved this
       issue since it violated the Appellant’s right to a fair trial. If it was not for
       counsel’s ineffectiveness on the trial and appellate level, the Appellant
       would have been awarded a new trial.

App. 620–21 (initial brief); App. 639 (on remand). According to our dissenting colleague,

these two passing references to appellate counsel suffice for Slaughter to have asserted

his claim “in terms so particular as to call to mind a specific right protected by the

Constitution,” or to have alleged “a pattern of facts that is well within the mainstream of

constitutional litigation.” Nara, 488 F.3d at 198; see Diss. Op. 4–5. We disagree.

       For starters, the single reference to appellate counsel in the point heading cannot

constitute fair presentation because the claim articulated there is cognizable only against

trial counsel. It would have been a magical feat indeed had appellate counsel “object[ed]”

or “request[ed] that the jury’s partial verdict be recorded before the trial court terminated

deliberations and seated the already dismissed alternate juror to begin new deliberations.”

App. 618, 636. The logical impossibility of appellate counsel objecting at trial explains

why Slaughter’s argument focused entirely on trial counsel. He began by stating: “The

                                              9
Appellant claims that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the replacement

of an already dismissed alternate juror after the juror had started deliberations.” App. 618.

Then, after describing the events from trial and the relevant legal rules, Slaughter

explained: “In the instant matter, [trial] counsel was ineffective for failing to properly

object to and preserve this issue [of impaneling the alternate after the deliberations had

started] for appeal.” App. 619–20. After three pages devoted entirely to trial counsel’s

ineffectiveness, Slaughter then claimed he would have been entitled to a new trial had it

not been “for counsel’s ineffectiveness on the trial and appellate level.” Because that

reference to the “appellate level” was a non sequitur, it’s no surprise that Slaughter

provided no factual or legal basis for a claim of ineffectiveness at the “appellate level.”

App. 621.

       For these reasons, Slaughter neither asserted an ineffective assistance of appellate

counsel claim “in terms so particular as to call to mind a specific right protected by the

Constitution,” nor alleged “a pattern of facts that is well within the mainstream of

constitutional litigation.” Nara, 488 F.3d at 198; see Diss. Op. 4–5. Instead, he articulated

an ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim bookended by stray (and inapposite)

references to appellate counsel. Bald and irrelevant references such as these two cannot

pass for fair presentation.

       In light of the foregoing, Slaughter’s counsel predictably admitted that the claim

of ineffective appellate counsel was not fairly presented in state court. At the outset of

oral argument, the Court asked whether the ineffective assistance of trial counsel claim

was the only “live claim” on appeal. Counsel readily agreed. Oral Argument 1:20–38.

                                              10
And when pressed about this concession that Slaughter did not fairly present the

ineffective assistance of appellate counsel claim, counsel explained: “The concern that

we had was that the argument really focused on trial counsel’s performance, although

appellate counsel was mentioned in the heading.” See Oral Argument at 13:14–30.

Counsel was right to have this concern. Although Slaughter mentioned appellate counsel,

his claims were aimed at trial counsel alone.2

       Slaughter’s failure to preserve his claim of ineffective appellate counsel is not

limited to the state court litigation. He also failed to pursue that claim in his federal

habeas petition and the accompanying memorandum of law he filed pro se in the District

Court. Repeating what his counsel filed in the Superior Court, Slaughter mentioned

appellate counsel only in passing, claiming he was denied effective assistance of “both

trial and appellate counsel where there was a failure to object to and/or request that the

jury’s partial verdict be recorded before the trial court terminated deliberations and seated

the already dismissed alternate juror to begin new deliberations.” App. 43. Despite this

one-word reference to “appellate” counsel, Slaughter again presented no legal or factual

basis for ineffective assistance of appellate counsel in his memorandum of law.


       2
         The dissent claims we are not bound by counsel’s concession. Diss. Op. 8–9. But
the cases it cites in support of that position stand only for the proposition that courts are
not bound by concessions on points of law. For example, the dissent relies on our opinion
in United States v. Engler, 806 F.2d 425, 433 (3d Cir. 1986). In Engler, we noted merely
that we were not bound by the government’s concession “that the absence of a scienter
requirement in the felony provision of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act violates the due
process clause.” 806 F.2d at 433. The concession by Slaughter’s counsel was markedly
different because he effectively withdrew the ineffective assistance of appellate counsel
claim. And we know of no authority allowing us to, sua sponte, resuscitate withdrawn
claims.
                                              11
       Finally, Slaughter failed to raise this claim in his pro se motion for a certificate of

appealability. See 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2) and (3) (certificate may issue only on a

substantial showing of denial of constitutional right and certificate shall indicate issue

satisfying that requirement). He argued that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to

properly object to the trial court’s Saunders violations, never once mentioning appellate

counsel in relation to that issue. Docket No. 18-2062, June 15, 2018 Motion for

Certificate of Appealability, 10–13.

       Although we construe pro se habeas petitions liberally, see, e.g., Rainey v. Varner,

603 F.3d 189, 198 (3d Cir. 2010), we cannot relieve a petitioner of the requirement to

“state the facts supporting each ground” for relief. Habeas Corpus Rule 2(c); see Mayle v.

Felix, 545 U.S. 644, 649 (2005). And we will not create claims that a habeas petitioner

did not pursue, particularly when he also failed to raise them in his motion for a

certificate of appealability.

                                       *      *       *

       For the reasons stated, we will affirm the District Court’s order denying

Slaughter’s petition for writ of habeas corpus.




                                              12
KRAUSE, Circuit Judge, dissenting.

       Because I would hold that Appellant Rondell Slaughter fairly presented a

meritorious ineffective-assistance-of-appellate counsel (IAAC) claim to the Pennsylvania

courts, I respectfully dissent.

                                              I.

       At the time of Slaughter’s trial in 2002, Pennsylvania Rule of Criminal Procedure

1108(a) provided that “[a]n alternate juror who does not replace a principal juror shall be

discharged before the jury retires to consider its verdict.” Pa. R. Crim. P. 1108(a) (1980).

Thus, an alternate juror could not be substituted for a principal juror after deliberations

began. The Pennsylvania Superior Court—whose decisions we take as authoritative on

federal habeas review, Everett v. Beard, 290 F.3d 500, 511 (3d Cir. 2002)—explained in

Commonwealth v. Saunders, 686 A.2d 25 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1996), that a violation of Rule

1108(a) was presumed prejudicial on direct appeal. Id. at 28. Only if a trial court took

four specific steps, involving the questioning and instruction of both the alternate and

primary jurors, would that presumption of prejudice be rebutted. Id. at 29.

       Rule 1108(a) was plainly violated at Slaughter’s trial. After the first day of

deliberations, one of the jurors became sick and appeared unlikely to return. Slaughter’s

counsel moved for a mistrial, but the judge denied the motion and instead substituted an

alternate juror. Slaughter’s counsel objected to that ruling and his objection was noted

for the record. The judge then re-instructed the jurors but did not question them to the

thorough extent described in Saunders as necessary to rebut the presumption of prejudice



                                              1
resulting from a violation of Rule 1108(a). Slaughter’s counsel did not object to the

judge’s failure to colloquy the jurors.

       The case was by all appearances a close one. The evidence against Slaughter

consisted of testimony by a single eyewitness who was the admitted leader of a

prostitution and drug-dealing ring and had refused for several months to cooperate;

physical evidence was found in the possession of Slaughter’s co-defendant but not,

apparently, in Slaughter’s. The jury struggled with this evidence: Before the juror

substitution, the jury deadlocked; after the juror substitution, it did so again.

       Ultimately, the reconstituted jury convicted Slaughter on all charges, so Slaughter

brought a direct appeal of his conviction. His appellate counsel did not raise a claim

under Rule 1108(a) and Saunders, opting instead to challenge the sufficiency of the

evidence, the length of the sentence, and the judge’s charge to the once-deadlocked jury

to continue deliberating. These claims were rejected on direct review.

       Slaughter proceeded to challenge his conviction under the Post-Conviction

Reform Act (PCRA). After his petition was denied in the Court of Common Pleas, the

Superior Court granted relief on Slaughter’s ineffective-assistance-of-trial-counsel

(IATC) claim. Because it granted relief, that court expressly declined to reach

Slaughter’s other claims, including his IAAC claim. After the Supreme Court vacated

and remanded for reconsideration of the IATC claim under the proper prejudice standard,

the Superior Court reconsidered, and denied, Slaughter’s trial-counsel ineffectiveness

claim. It once again failed, this time without explanation, to reach any of Slaughter’s

other claims.

                                               2
       Slaughter then filed a timely pro se federal habeas petition, which was denied. We

granted a certificate of appealability (COA) on three questions: “(1) whether trial counsel

was ineffective for failing to object to the trial court’s jury instruction in seating an

alternate juror after the jury had started deliberations, see Commonwealth v. Saunders,

686 A.2d 25 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1996); and (2) whether appellate counsel was ineffective for

failing to challenge the trial court’s (a) decision to seat an alternate juror after

deliberations had begun, see Saunders, 686 A.2d at 27, and (b) jury instruction in seating

the alternate juror, see id. at 29.” JA 31. And at our instruction, appointed counsel

diligently briefed those issues.

                                               II.

       The crux of my disagreement with the Majority concerns whether Slaughter’s

IAAC claim was fairly presented to the state courts. The Majority concludes that

Slaughter did not fairly present this claim and therefore accepts Slaughter’s counsel’s

perplexing concession at oral argument to that end. I respectfully disagree. Under a

straightforward application of our fair-presentation precedent, Slaughter’s claim was

properly before the state courts. The Commonwealth’s contrary conclusion rests on

inapposite case law dealing with forfeiture on direct appeal. And we are not compelled to

accept Slaughter’s legally incorrect last-minute concession. For those reasons, I would

hold that Slaughter’s IAAC claim was fairly presented.1


       1
        The Majority examines Slaughter’s District Court briefing and his application to
a motions panel of our Court for a Certificate of Appealability and concludes that,
because Slaughter allegedly failed to raise the IAAC claim in those submissions, we
cannot now “create claims that a habeas petitioner did not pursue.” Maj. Op. at 12. For
                                                3
                                             A.

       The fair-presentation requirement “merely requires a petitioner to give the state

courts the opportunity to pass on the merits of a claim.” Velazquez v. Superintendent

Fayette SCI, 937 F.3d 151, 160 (3d Cir. 2019) (internal quotation marks and citation

omitted). A petitioner fulfills this obligation “if he presented the same factual and legal

basis for the claim to the state courts” as he presents to the federal courts. Nara v. Frank,

488 F.3d 187, 198 (3d Cir. 2007) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

       In his briefing to the Pennsylvania Superior Court,2 Slaughter presented the factual

and legal basis for a conclusion that his appellate counsel rendered constitutionally

ineffective assistance. His point heading expressly referenced his IAAC claim:

       The Appellant was denied due process and effective assistance of counsel by
       both trial and appellate counsel where there was a failure to object to and/or
       request that the jury’s partial verdict be recorded before the trial court
       terminated deliberations and seated the already dismissed alternate juror to
       begin new deliberations.



the reasons I explain below, I disagree. But at this point, it would not be dispositive,
even if Slaughter had not clearly raised the IAAC claim at earlier stages of the federal
habeas litigation. This issue is before us now because our own motions panel granted a
COA on the IAAC claim—and if there are any prior instances in which a merits panel of
this Court reexamined the providence of a prior panel’s decision to grant a COA, they are
exceedingly rare. Instituting such a practice would not only unnecessarily add to the
burden of this Court’s merits panels but also undermine the reliance interests of litigants
we instruct to brief such issues.
       2
         The Majority asserts that Slaughter’s earlier briefing in the Court of Common
Pleas demonstrated that he “understood this [appellate-counsel] claim and how to present
it.” Maj. Op. at 8. Even assuming that is true it is immaterial, for the fair-presentation
inquiry concerns what the reviewing court—here, the Superior Court—would have
reasonably understood from Slaughter’s briefing, not what Slaughter did or did not
understand about his own claim.
                                              4
JA 618 (emphasis added) (initial brief); JA 636 (emphasis added) (on remand).

       And in discussing this claim, he clearly explained the reason that appellate counsel

erred—i.e., failing to raise a claim of error of improper juror substitution under Saunders’

elaboration of Rule 1108(a)—and the conclusion that this error constituted ineffective

assistance on the part of his appellate counsel:

       [T]he trial court’s post-submission substitution of the alternate . . . violated
       the rule of law in Saunders. Counsel should have properly preserved this
       issue since it violated the Appellant’s right to a fair trial. If it was not for
       counsel’s ineffectiveness on the trial and appellate level, the Appellant
       would have been awarded a new trial.

JA 620–21 (emphasis added) (initial brief); JA 639 (emphasis added) (on remand).

       Thus, Slaughter did all he needed to do: He notified the state courts of the legal

nature of his claim—ineffective assistance of appellate counsel—and set forth the factual

basis upon which that claim rested. The Majority faults Slaughter for devoting his

explanation of the error to a description of what occurred at trial, which the Majority

perceives as directed “entirely to trial counsel’s ineffectiveness.” Maj. Op. at 10. But

what else would Slaughter need to say? The basis for trial counsel’s alleged

ineffectiveness—the violation of Rule 1108(a)—was the very same basis for appellate

counsel’s alleged ineffectiveness. So Slaughter’s description of the trial court’s error and

trial counsel’s failure to request a curative instruction after having properly objected to

the substitution, combined with the absence of this issue in Slaughter’s briefing on direct

appeal, relay all that is necessary to explain what Slaughter meant when he referenced

“counsel’s ineffectiveness on the trial and appellate level.” JA 620–21.



                                              5
       And in any event, having been confronted with the fact that the trial court in this

case effected a plain violation of state law, the persistence of this error through the direct-

appeal process in conjunction with Slaughter’s repeated references to appellate counsel’s

ineffectiveness was enough to call to mind for any reasonable jurist “a pattern of facts

that is well within the mainstream of constitutional litigation,” which suffices to fairly

present a claim under our case law. Wilkerson v. Superintendent Fayette SCI, 871 F.3d

221, 229 (3d Cir. 2017). Indeed, Slaughter did more than that here; his “filings provided

ample basis to pass on the merits of this claim,” and so his claim was fairly presented.

Velazquez, 937 F.3d at 160.

                                              B.

       In urging a contrary result, the Commonwealth contends that Slaughter’s clear

mentions of appellate-counsel ineffectiveness in his state-court briefing “can hardly be

considered fair presentation when the argument section contains little or no explanation

as to how, on the petitioner’s theory, any such violation occurred.”3 Appellee’s Br. 51.

This line of argument misapprehends the applicable standard.

       As explained above, Slaughter presented the “factual and legal basis” for his

IAAC claim to the state courts and therefore fairly presented it under our precedent.

Nara, 488 F.3d at 198. The Commonwealth does not cite any relevant habeas case law to

contravene this conclusion and support its assertion that Slaughter’s IAAC claim was not


       3
        The Commonwealth’s procedural-default argument is advanced as the
Commonwealth’s alternative theory as to why the Superior Court failed to address the
IAAC claim. Its primary theory is that the Superior Court considered the IAAC claim so
frivolous it was not worth addressing. See id.
                                               6
sufficiently developed. Rather, it invokes the principle set forth in two direct appeals, In

re Wettach, 811 F.3d 99, 115 (3d Cir. 2016), and United States v. Rawlins, 606 F.3d 73,

82 n.11 (3d Cir. 2010), that we will not review a claim in our Court where a party “fail[s]

to develop [the] argument in [its] opening brief.” Wettach, 811 F.3d at 115; accord

Rawlins, 606 F.3d at 82 n.11 (stating that the party “waived the issue by failing to

develop it in the argument section of his brief”).

       Those cases are inapposite. It is true that we hold a claim forfeited if it is not

developed in a party’s opening brief to our Court. Here, however, Slaughter’s opening

brief exhaustively set forth his IAAC claim in eight pages of lucid argument. That is as

far as the standard recited in Wettach—that an argument in our Court must be stated and

developed, or else it is forfeited—reaches. Our standard for fair presentation is far less

demanding: It does not even require that the petitioner expressly state his claim in his

state-court briefing. See Wilkerson, 871 F.3d at 228–30. The gravamen of the fair-

presentation inquiry is simply whether the state courts had the opportunity to reach the

claim, see Velazquez, 937 F.3d at 160—not the quantum of “support for [the] position” or

the presence of “substantive argument” in the petitioner’s state-court briefing, see

Wettach, 811 F.3d at 115. In any case, even if this more stringent standard were

applicable—which it plainly is not—Slaughter not only expressly stated to the state

courts that he was making an IAAC claim but also set forth ample support for that claim

in his state-court briefing. So the Commonwealth’s argument fails.




                                              7
                                             C.

       The Majority also bases its rejection of the IAAC claim on Slaughter’s counsel’s

startling concession at oral argument that the IAAC claim was not fairly presented.

Under the circumstances, I would not accept that concession.

       I begin by noting just how improvident the concession was. We granted a COA

for the express purpose of addressing Slaughter’s IAAC claim. In Slaughter’s opening

brief in this Court, the IAAC claim was the primary issue: It was discussed first and in

the most depth, as Slaughter’s counsel persuasively contended that the IAAC claim was

properly before us and was correct on its merits. In opposing this claim, the

Commonwealth’s brief hardly touched on the fair-presentation requirement: It contended

primarily that the state courts neglected to address the IAAC claim because it was

patently meritless and argued only in the alternative that they neglected to address the

claim because it was not fairly presented. That argument ran two double-spaced pages in

a nearly sixty-page brief and, as explained above, was legally incorrect. Nonetheless,

Slaughter’s arguing counsel—a different attorney than the one who prepared his opening

brief—began his oral argument by conceding the IAAC claim on fair-presentation

grounds.

       We are not bound by that concession. As the Second Circuit recently explained,

“It is well-established that a court cannot properly determine a question of law on the

basis of a party’s concession . . . . Indeed, a court retains the independent power to

identify and apply the proper construction of governing law.” United States v. Castillo,

896 F.3d 141, 149 (2nd Cir. 2018) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted) (citing

                                             8
Nat’l Aeronautics & Space Admin. v. Nelson, 562 U.S. 134, 163 n.* (2011) (Scalia and

Thomas, JJ., concurring in the judgment) (“We are not bound by a litigant’s concession

on an issue of law.”)); accord United States v. Perez-Silvan, 861 F.3d 935, 938 n.2 (9th

Cir. 2017); United States v. Hope, 545 F.3d 293, 295 (5th Cir. 2008); United States v.

Borrero-Acevedo, 533 F.3d 11, 15 n.3 (1st Cir. 2008). We have recognized the same

principle. See United States v. Engler, 806 F.2d 425, 433 (3d Cir. 1986).

       In this case, our duty to exercise our “independent power to identify and apply”

the law weighs most heavily. Castillo, 896 F.3d at 149. We confront what is

unmistakably a question of law. Before counsel’s concession, we granted Slaughter a

COA to consider the IAAC claim and that claim was fully briefed to us. And while

counsel stated at oral argument that he decided to “focus on the IATC claim, not the

IAAC claim,” Oral Argument at 1:40, because of “concerns about fair presentation with

the [IAAC] claim,” id. at 3:25, he also stated that he would “be grateful if the court felt it

could reach [the IAAC claim] on this record,” id. at 12:50. Counsel thus conceded that,

in his view, the IAAC claim had not been fairly presented—but also expressly invited us

to analyze it if we disagreed with his legal analysis. We can do so because, as even the

Majority agrees, “courts are not bound by concessions on points of law.” Maj. Op. at 11

n.2. And under the circumstances of this case, that is our duty.4 See Castillo, 896 F.3d at



       4
          Because whether a claim was fairly presented is a legal question and because the
Majority agrees that we are not bound by concessions on points of law, Maj. Op. at 11
n.2, it should also agree that the fair presentation issue is one we must independently
address. Instead, the Majority circumvents this logic by asserting that counsel’s
concession “effectively” withdrew the IAAC claim in its entirety. Id. But the effect is of
                                              9
149. I therefore would accept counsel’s invitation to reject his concession, would

consider the fair-presentation issue and, as I have explained, would resolve it in

Slaughter’s favor.

                                             III.

       Because I conclude that the IAAC claim was fairly presented, I would consider its

merits, and because the state courts failed entirely to address that claim, we do not apply

AEDPA deference but instead review it de novo. See Simmons v. Beard, 590 F.3d 223,

231 (3d Cir. 2009). A petitioner is entitled to relief on an ineffective-assistance-of-

appellate-counsel claim where appellate counsel performs unreasonably and the

petitioner is prejudiced as a result. See Smith v. Robbins, 528 U.S. 259, 288 (2000). Both

prongs of this test were met here.

       Slaughter’s appellate counsel performed unreasonably. Appellate counsel’s

performance is objectively unreasonable “when ignored issues are clearly stronger than

those presented.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Here, Slaughter’s

counsel presented three claims: excessive sentence, coercion of the jury by charging them

to continue deliberating after initial deadlock, and sufficiency of the evidence. See JA

570–72. These claims were easily rejected by the Superior Court. See id.

       The claim of improper juror substitution was “clearly stronger.” Robbins, 528

U.S. at 288. Under Rule 1108(a), Slaughter’s trial judge was forbidden from substituting

the alternate juror, and under Saunders, that error was presumptively prejudicial unless


our own making: The record of oral argument makes clear that is not what happened
here.
                                             10
the judge extensively questioned the jurors, which he failed to do. See 686 A.2d at 28–

29. Thus, the Saunders claim would have resulted in a new trial. Id. at 29.

       The Commonwealth’s only response to this straightforward reasoning is that the

juror-substitution claim was not preserved at trial and that appellate counsel therefore did

not err in declining to raise it. The Commonwealth contends that because Slaughter’s

trial counsel did not object to the trial court’s instructions to the reconstituted jury, his

appellate counsel could not have argued on appeal that the juror substitution was

improper. But that contention misapprehends squarely applicable Pennsylvania law:

“[W]hen an objection is overruled, failing to request curative instructions or a mistrial

does not result in waiver.” Commonwealth v. McGeth, 622 A.2d 940, 943 (Pa. Super. Ct.

1993). Thus, any objection (or lack thereof) to the jury instructions was irrelevant to

preservation of the error in seating the alternate juror—which Slaughter’s trial counsel

unequivocally objected to and therefore preserved. For that reason, Slaughter’s appellate

counsel performed deficiently in failing to raise the juror-substitution issue.

       That error prejudiced Slaughter. Prejudice results from ineffective appellate

assistance where there is “a reasonable probability that, but for his counsel’s

unreasonable failure to [identify the issue], he would have prevailed on his appeal.”

Robbins, 528 U.S. at 285. Here, had Slaughter’s counsel raised the Saunders claim on

appeal, Slaughter unquestionably “would have prevailed” because the trial court violated

Rule 1108(a) and failed to colloquy the jurors as required to rebut the resulting

presumption of prejudice. See Saunders, 686 A.2d at 29. Slaughter’s appellate counsel’s

failure to raise such a claim therefore cost him a new trial.

                                               11
                                             IV.

       Because Slaughter fairly presented his IAAC claim and it succeeds on the merits, I

would reverse the judgment of the District Court and remand for the petition to be

granted. I express no opinion on whether Slaughter may be able to seek belated relief

through the narrow but extant avenues for bringing successive habeas claims under state

or federal law. See Commonwealth v. Parish, 224 A.3d 682, 702 (Pa. 2020) (allowing

filing of second PCRA petition where first counsel’s “performance [wa]s so deficient that

it ha[d] entirely denied the post-conviction petitioner the right to appeal”); 28 U.S.C.

§ 2244(b)(2) (allowing filing of second federal habeas petition in certain cases involving

newly discovered evidence). If they are not, then this case will represent a deeply

unfortunate—and, I hope, rare—instance of attorney errors costing a defendant a clearly

meritorious claim. Given these reservations, I respectfully dissent.




                                             12
