SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
MARYLAND, PETITIONER v. JAMES KULBICKI
on petition for writ of certiorari to the court of appeals of
maryland
No. 14–848. Decided October 5, 2015
Per Curiam.
A criminal defendant “shall enjoy the right . . . to
have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.” U. S. Const.,
Amdt. 6. We have held that this right requires effective counsel in
both state and federal prosecutions, even if the defendant is
unable to afford counsel. Gideon v. Wainwright, 372
U. S. 335, 344 (1963) . Counsel is unconstitutionally
ineffective if his performance is both deficient, meaning
his errors are “so serious” that he no longer functions as
“counsel,” and prejudicial, meaning his errors deprive the
defendant of a fair trial. Strickland v. Washington,
466 U. S. 668, 687 (1984) . Applying this standard in name
only, the Court of Appeals of Maryland held that James Kulbicki’s
defense attorneys were unconstitutionally ineffective. We summarily
reverse.
In 1993, Kulbicki shot his 22-year-old mistress in the head at
pointblank range. The two had been ensnarled in a paternity suit,
and the killing occurred the weekend before a scheduled hearing
about unpaid child support. At Kulbicki’s trial, commencing in
1995, Agent Ernest Peele of the FBI testified as the State’s expert
on Comparative Bullet Lead Analysis, or CBLA. In testimony of the
sort CBLA experts had provided for decades, Peele testified that
the composition of elements in the molten lead of a bullet fragment
found in Kulbicki’s truck matched the composition of lead in a
bullet fragment removed from the victim’s brain; a similarity of
the sort one would “ ‘expect’ ” if “ ‘examining two
pieces of the same bullet.’ ” 440 Md. 33, 41, 99 A. 3d
730, 735 (2014). He further testified that a bullet taken from
Kulbicki’s gun was not an “exac[t]” match to the bullet fragments,
but was similar enough that the two bullets likely came from the
same package. Id., at 42–44, 99 A. 3d, at 735–736.
After considering this ballistics evidence, additional physical
evidence from Kulbicki’s truck, and witness testimony, the jury
convicted Kulbicki of first-degree murder.
Kulbicki then filed a petition for post-conviction relief, which
lingered in state court until 2006 when Kulbicki added a claim that
his defense attorneys were ineffective for failing to question the
legitimacy of CBLA. By then, 11 years after his conviction, CBLA
had fallen out of favor. Indeed, Kulbicki supplemented his petition
once more in 2006 after the Court of Appeals of Maryland held for
the first time that CBLA evidence was not generally accepted by the
scientific community and was therefore inadmissible. See
Clemons v. State, 392 Md. 339, 371, 896 A. 2d
1059, 1078 (2006).
Kulbicki lost in the lower state courts and appealed to the
Court of Appeals of Maryland. At that point, Kulbicki abandoned his
claim of ineffective assistance with respect to the CBLA evidence,
but the high court vacated Kulbicki’s conviction on that ground
alone. Kulbicki’s counsel, according to the court, should have
found a report coauthored by Agent Peele in 1991 that “presaged the
flaws in CBLA evidence.” 440 Md., at 40, 99 A. 3d, at 734. One
of the many findings of the report was that the composition of lead
in some bullets was the same as that of lead in other bullets
packaged many months later in a separate box. Rather than conduct
“further research to explain the existence of overlapping
compositions,” the authors “speculated” that coincidence (or, in
one case, the likelihood that separately packaged bullets
originated from the same source of lead) caused the overlap.
Id., at 49, 99 A. 3d, at 739. The Court of Appeals
opined that this lone finding should have caused the report’s
authors to doubt “that bullets produced from different
sources of lead would have a unique chemical composition,” the
faulty assumption that ultimately led the court to reject CBLA
evidence 15 years later. Ibid.; see Clemons,
supra, 369–370, 896 A. 2d, at 1077. The authors’
“failure to fully explore the variance,” the Court of Appeals
concluded, was “at odds with the scientific method.” 440 Md., at
50, 99 A. 3d, at 740.
In the Court of Appeals’ view, any good attorney should have
spotted this methodological flaw. The court held that counsel’s
failure to unearth the report, to identify one of its findings as
“at odds with the scientific method,” and to use this
methodological flaw to cast doubt on CBLA during counsel’s
cross-examination of Peele, “fell short of prevailing professional
norms.” Id., at 50–53, 99 A. 3d, at 740–742. Concluding
that counsel’s supposed deficiency was prejudicial, the court set
aside the conviction and ordered a new trial. Id., at 56, 99
A. 3d, at 743–744.
We reverse. The Court of Appeals offered no support for its
conclusion that Kulbicki’s defense attorneys were constitutionally
required to predict the demise of CBLA. Instead, the court indulged
in the “natural tendency to speculate as to whether a different
trial strategy might have been more successful.” Lockhart v.
Fretwell, 506 U. S. 364, 372 (1993) . To combat this
tendency, we have “adopted the rule of contemporary assessment of
counsel’s conduct.” Ibid. Had the Court of Appeals heeded
this rule, it would have “judge[d] the reasonableness of counsel’s
challenged conduct . . . viewed as of the time of counsel’s
conduct.” Strickland, supra, at 690.
At the time of Kulbicki’s trial in 1995, the validity of CBLA
was widely accepted, and courts regularly admitted CBLA evidence
until 2003. See United States v. Higgs, 663
F. 3d 726, 738 (CA4 2011). As the Court of Appeals
acknowledged, even the 1991 report itself did not question the
validity of CBLA, concluding that it was a valid and useful
forensic tool to match suspect to victim. 440 Md., at 51,
n. 11, 99 A. 3d, at 740, n. 11. Counsel did not
perform deficiently by dedicating their time and focus to elements
of the defense that did not involve poking methodological holes in
a then-uncontroversial mode of ballistics analysis.
That is especially the case here, since there is no reason to
believe that a diligent search would even have discovered the
supposedly crucial report. The Court of Appeals offered a single
citation in support of its sweeping statement that the report “was
available” to Kulbicki’s counsel in 1995—a Government Printing
Office Web page accessed by the Court of Appeals, apparently
conducting its own Internet research nearly two decades after the
trial. Id., at 51, and n. 12, 99 A. 3d, at 741,
and n. 12; see also Brief in Opposition 14. The Web page
indicates that a compilation of forensic studies that included the
report was “distributed to various public libraries in 1994.” 440
Md., at 51, n. 12, 99 A. 3d, at 741, n. 12. But which
ones? And in an era of card catalogues, not a worldwide web, what
efforts would counsel have had to expend to find the compilation?
And had they found it, would counsel really have combed through the
entire compilation, and have identified the one (of many) findings
in one of the reports, the disregard of which counsel would have
recognized to be “at odds with the scientific method”? And then,
would effective counsel really have brought to the attention of the
jury a report whose conclusion was that CBLA was a valid
investigative technique in cases just like Kulbicki’s? Neither the
Court of Appeals nor Kulbicki has answers. Given the
uncontroversial nature of CBLA at the time of Kulbicki’s trial, the
effect of the judgment below is to demand that lawyers go “looking
for a needle in a haystack,” even when they have “reason to doubt
there is any needle there.” Rompilla v. Beard, 545
U. S. 374, 389 (2005) . The Court of Appeals demanded
something close to “perfect advocacy”—far more than the “reasonable
competence” the right to counsel guarantees. Yarborough v.
Gentry, 540 U. S. 1, 8 (2003) (per curiam).
Kulbicki’s trial counsel did not provide deficient performance
when they failed to uncover the 1991 report and to use the report’s
so-called methodological flaw against Peele on cross-examination.
(We need not, and so do not, decide whether the supposed error
prejudiced Kulbicki.) The petition for writ of certiorari is
granted, and the judgment of the Court of Appeals for Maryland is
reversed.
It is so ordered.