Court Opinion

ID: 9912593
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-12-22 20:00:47.062257+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:00:24.110608
License: Public Domain

United States Court of Appeals
                        For the First Circuit

No. 22-1027

                            MARIO CRUZADO,

                        Petitioner, Appellant,

                                  v.

              NELSON ALVES, Superintendent, MCI Norfolk,

                        Respondent, Appellee.

          APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
               FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

          [Hon. Denise J. Casper, U.S. District Judge]

                                Before

                         Barron, Chief Judge,
                 Thompson and Gelpí, Circuit Judges.

     Emma Quinn-Judge, with whom Thomas Miller and Zalkind Duncan
& Bernstein LLP were on brief, for appellant.

     Eva M. Badway, Assistant Attorney General of Massachusetts,
Criminal Bureau, with whom Andrea Joy Campbell, Attorney General
of Massachusetts, and Tyler Mayo, Legal Intern, were on brief, for
appellee.

                          December 22, 2023
          BARRON, Chief Judge.      Mario Cruzado ("Cruzado") appeals

from the dismissal of his federal petition for writ of habeas

corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254.             The    petition challenges his

Massachusetts-law    conviction   for     first-degree       murder.    After

explaining the basis for our jurisdiction over this appeal, we

affirm.

                                    I.

          Cruzado's    conviction        arose    out   of    the   following

undisputed events.    On November 26, 2010, Frederick Allen III's

("Allen") body was found in his apartment in Boston, Massachusetts.

Allen was a gay, African-American man.           The cause of his death was

strangulation and blunt-force trauma to the head.

          On December 7, 2010, investigators for the Boston Police

Department brought Cruzado to the police station to question him

about Allen's death. They showed Cruzado a picture of Allen, which

gave rise to the following exchange:

          Investigator 1 (I1): Okay. I'm going to show
          you a picture of a guy. See if you've ever
          seen this guy before.
          Cruzado (C): Who's that?
          I1: I'm asking you. Isn't this -- I'm asking
          you. Have you ever seen this guy before? Yes
          or no?
          C: Who . . . is that? Just a guy?
          I1: No, listen to me. Listen to me. Have you
          ever seen this guy before? Yes or no.
          C: He looks like a nigger to me.
          I1: Have you ever seen this guy before?

                                  - 2 -
          C: He looks like a nigger to me.
          I1: Have you ever seen this guy right here
          before?
          C: He looks like a nigger to me. No. He's
          black.
          I1: No. It's a yes or no question.
          C: He's black.
          I1: I understand.
          Investigator 2: Have you ever seen him?
          I1: Yes or no?
          C: Where . . . I've ever seen him?    I don't
          know that mother fucker.

          About three months later, in March 2011, Hilda Matiaz

("Matiaz"), a former girlfriend of Cruzado, told police that

Cruzado had called her on December 7, 2010, to tell her about an

incident in which he had met up with a friend, gone to the home of

an African-American man, and then showered and fallen asleep there.

Matiaz claimed that, in the account of the incident that Cruzado

gave her, he awoke to the man touching his testicles and reacted

by pushing the man away, putting the man in a headlock, and saying

that he was "not a faggot."   She further claimed that Cruzado told

her that, when the man fell to the floor, Cruzado left the man's

home.

          In 2012, Cruzado was charged in Suffolk County Superior

Court with first-degree murder for killing Allen.   At the ensuing

trial, the jury heard an uncensored and unredacted recording of

the investigative interview that we have recounted above.      The

recording was submitted into evidence to show Cruzado's animus

                               - 3 -
toward African Americans and thus to show Cruzado's partial motive

for killing Allen.

            The jury returned a guilty verdict, and Cruzado was

convicted of first-degree murder under Massachusetts law.         He was

sentenced to a prison term of life.

            Several years later, on July 1, 2016, Cruzado filed a

motion for a new trial.       The motion claimed that Cruzado had

received ineffective assistance of counsel and thus that his

conviction violated his right to counsel under the Sixth Amendment

of the U.S. Constitution.

            The state Superior Court judge denied the motion on March

30, 2017.    Cruzado then filed a motion for reconsideration, which

was also denied.

            Cruzado appealed both his conviction and the denial of

his motion for a new trial.      He appealed his conviction based on,

among other grounds, a challenge          to the state trial judge's

admission of the portion of the video recording of the interview

described    above.    Cruzado    appealed   his   first-degree   murder

conviction and the denial of his motion for a new trial directly

to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ("SJC") pursuant to

Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 278, § 33E.      See Commonwealth v. Billingslea,

143 N.E.3d 425, 439 (Mass. 2020). The SJC consolidated his appeals

and denied them.

                                  - 4 -
          With respect to the admission of the recording, the SJC

held that the state trial court did not abuse its discretion in

determining that the probative value of the evidence outweighed

its prejudicial effect because "[Massachusetts] is entitled to

elicit the fact that [Cruzado] could have been enraged, not just

because he was allegedly touched by [a] gay man, but he was

allegedly touched by an African-American man."     Commonwealth v.

Cruzado, 103 N.E.3d 732, 737-38 (Mass. 2018).   The SJC also stated

in a footnote that "[t]he defendant's argument that the admission

of the word 'nigger' as evidence of racial animus violated his due

process rights is unavailing, as the word came from his own mouth

several times."   Id. at 738 n.2.

          On November 13, 2018, Cruzado filed a pro se petition

for habeas relief pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in the United States

District Court for the District of Massachusetts.     The petition

claimed that: (1) Cruzado's right to due process was violated when

the state trial court allowed, over Cruzado's objection, admission

of portions of the recorded police interview described above in

which Cruzado used a racial slur in reference to the victim; and

(2) Cruzado's trial counsel rendered constitutionally ineffective

assistance by failing to file a motion to suppress the fruits of

the search and seizure of a cell phone.

                               - 5 -
           After appointing counsel for Cruzado, the District Court

considered and denied Cruzado's petition in a November 3, 2021,

memorandum and order.      The District Court explained in the ruling

that it was "not inclined to issue a certificate of appealability"

but would "give Cruzado until December 3, 2021[,] to file a

memorandum,    if   he   seeks   to   address   the   issue   of   whether   a

certificate of appealability is warranted as to either or both

grounds in the Petition."

           On November 30, 2021, Cruzado filed a motion for an

extension of time to December 10, 2021, to file a memorandum of

law in support of the issuance of a certificate of appealability

("COA").      The District Court granted Cruzado's motion for an

extension of time after noting that there was no objection to the

motion by the respondent, Nelson Alves ("Alves"), Superintendent

of Massachusetts Correctional Institution, Norfolk.           Cruzado filed

his memorandum of law in support of issuance of a COA on December

9, 2021.

           The District Court issued a COA on January 4, 2022, as

to the due-process-based claim only, and Cruzado filed a notice of

appeal on the same day.      This Court then entered an order on March

21, 2022, that directed Cruzado either to move for voluntary

dismissal of the appeal pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate

Procedure 42(b) or to show cause, in writing, why his appeal should

                                      - 6 -
not be dismissed as untimely.           The show-cause order noted that

Cruzado filed a notice of appeal on January 4, 2022, from the

District Court's November 3, 2021, decision denying his petition

and that, under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(a)(1)(A), a

notice of appeal in a civil case must be filed within thirty days

of the judgment or order from which the appeal is taken.

            Cruzado responded to the show-cause order on March 22,

2022.    He stated in the response that he believed that no notice

of appeal could be filed until a COA had been issued.             On December

16, 2022, this Court issued an order that stated that Cruzado's

appeal would be allowed to proceed without prejudice to further

consideration of the jurisdictional question by the panel assigned

to decide the merits of Cruzado's petition.

                                      II.

            We begin with the question of whether we have appellate

jurisdiction.         That question turns on whether Cruzado filed a

timely notice of appeal.       See 28 U.S.C. § 2253; Bowles v. Russell,

551 U.S. 205, 214 (2007).        Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 3

sets    forth   the    requirements    that   a   filing   must   satisfy   to

constitute a notice of appeal, while Rule 4(a)(1)(A) provides that

the notice of appeal in a civil case must be filed "within 30 days

after entry of the judgment or order appealed from."

                                      - 7 -
          On   January   4,   2022,   Cruzado   filed   a   document   that

constituted a notice of appeal under Rule 3.            But that document

was not timely under Rule 4(a)(1)(A), because the District Court

denied Cruzado's petition on November 3, 2022.1 Thus, Cruzado asks

us to focus on a second filing that he made, which he contends was

not only filed within Rule's 4(a)(1)(A)'s thirty-day window but

also constituted a notice of appeal.        The filing is the motion

that Cruzado made on November 30, 2022, in which he sought an

     1 Cruzado argues in the alternative that the notice of appeal
that he filed on January 4, 2022, was timely because it was filed
within thirty days of the District Court's issuance of the COA.
He rests this contention on the ground that the order that denied
the petition for habeas corpus was not a "final order" because at
the time of the order the District Court had not ruled on whether
a COA should issue. He relies for this contention on Rule 11(a)
of the Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases, which states that "[t]he
district court must issue or deny a certificate of appealability
when it enters a final order adverse to the applicant[,]" and our
Circuit's     Local    Rule    22.0(a),    which     states    that
"[t]hese . . . rules require the district judge to rule on the
issuance of a certificate of appealability when a final order
issues."    But there is no basis for concluding that an order
denying a petition for habeas corpus must be accompanied by such
a ruling on the COA to constitute a "final" order.       See, e.g.,
Bell v. Mizell, 931 F.2d 444, 444-45 (7th Cir. 1991) (per curiam).
Cruzado does advance for the first time in his reply brief the
additional contention that the specific order in this case that
denied his petition was not "final" because of what that order
stated regarding the time that he would have in which to apply for
a COA.    But we do not consider that contention here, because
Cruzado did not make it in his opening brief. See Sparkle Hill,
Inc. v. Interstate Mat Corp., 788 F.3d 25, 29 (1st Cir. 2015) ("Our
precedent is clear: we do not consider arguments for reversing a
decision of a district court when the argument is not raised in a
party's opening brief.").

                                 - 8 -
extension of time to file a memorandum of law in support of an

application for a COA.

                                  A.

          Rule 3(c)(1) provides that a notice of appeal must name

the parties taking the appeal, the judgment or order from which

the appeal is being taken, and the court to which the appeal is

being made.     At the same time, Rule 3(c)(7) states that "[a]n

appeal must not be dismissed for informality of form or title of

the notice of appeal."

          In Thomas v. Morton Int'l, Inc., 916 F.2d 39, 40 (1st

Cir. 1990) (per curiam), we confronted a question about the kinds

of filings that constitute notices of appeal.         The issue arose in

connection with a motion for an extension of time to file a notice

of appeal.    Id.

          Notably,   the   plaintiff    in   Thomas   had   moved   for   an

extension of time to file his notice of appeal on the ground that

his counsel had learned of the granting of "Defendant's Motion to

Dismiss" only a week earlier.    The motion for an extension of time

also stated that "[t]he [p]laintiff believes and avers that he has

a meritorious Appeal and that the Motion to Dismiss was allowed

without hearing."    After the motion for an extension of time was

granted, the plaintiff then filed a notice of appeal outside of

                                - 9 -
the extended time given.     The question thus arose on appeal as to

whether a timely notice of appeal had been filed.       Id.

           In assessing whether there was appellate jurisdiction,

we acknowledged in Thomas the proviso set forth in Rule 3(c)(7)

and explained that the "history behind this proviso indicates that

courts have, at times, interpreted the formal requirements of a

notice of appeal liberally, especially in cases of uncounseled

persons like pro se prisoners, where letters evidencing a desire

to appeal have been accepted as timely, informal notices of

appeal."   916 F.2d at 40.   But we explained that the plaintiff who

was claiming that the motion for an extension of time to file a

notice of appeal itself constituted the notice of appeal "[was]

represented by counsel, and his motion for an extension of time in

no way purported to place the court and opposing party on notice

that he was at that time appealing, and that motion was meant

functionally to be the requisite notice of appeal."             Id.    We

further explained that "the motion was a request to the court for

additional time within which to file the required notice" before

concluding that, in such circumstances, "[t]o treat such a request

for extra time as the notice itself would be to render the notice

requirement meaningless."    Id.   Indeed, we noted, the appellant's

attorney   "clearly   recognized   the   difference   between   the   two

documents when, out of time, he later filed a notice of appeal."

                                - 10 -
Id.   Thus, we rejected the plaintiff's contention that his motion

constituted a notice of appeal.       Id.

           Two years after we decided Thomas, however, the Supreme

Court of the United States decided Smith v. Barry, 502 U.S. 244

(1992).   The Court explained there that Rule 3's requirements must

be    "liberally   construed"   and   that   even   when    a    filing   is

"technically at variance with the letter of [Rule 3], a court may

nonetheless find that the litigant has complied with the rule if

the litigant's action is the functional equivalent of what the

rule requires."      Id. at 248 (alteration in original) (quoting

Torres v. Oakland Scavenger Co., 487 U.S. 312, 316-17 (1988)).

Indeed, the Court went on to state in Smith that "[w]hile a notice

of appeal must specifically indicate the litigant's intent to seek

appellate review," it is "the notice afforded by [the] document,

not the litigant's motivation in filing it" that "determines the

document's sufficiency as a notice of appeal."        Id.       And, on that

basis, Smith held that an inmate's "informal brief" in response to

a briefing order could qualify as the functional equivalent of a

notice of appeal.    Id. at 250.

           Then, in the wake of Smith, we held in Campiti v.

Matesanz, 333 F.3d 317, 319-20 (1st Cir. 2003), that a motion for

appointment of counsel was the "functional equivalent" of a notice

of appeal.    We did so even though the motion was not styled as a

                                 - 11 -
notice of appeal and merely requested that the district court take

a step -- the appointment of counsel -- that could facilitate the

later filing of such a notice.            Id. at 320.     Moreover, we did so

despite our ruling in Thomas, as we explained in Campiti that,

even though it was not clear if Thomas survived Smith, it was clear

under Smith that the specific motion for appointment of counsel at

issue in Campiti did all that Smith required for a filing to

constitute a notice of appeal.           333 F.3d at 320, 320 n.3.

           As a result of our ruling in Campiti, Cruzado's motion

constitutes the functional equivalent of a notice of appeal if it

is materially indistinguishable from the motion in Campiti.                    We

therefore first turn our attention to Campiti before then turning

back to the filing at hand.

                                         B.

           The    appellant      in      Campiti   was    Francesco     Campiti

("Campiti").     Id. at 320.         He was a pro se habeas petitioner who

had filed a document that indisputably constituted a notice of

appeal but that was untimely because he had not filed it within

the   required   window   of    time     established     by   Federal   Rule   of

Appellate Procedure 4.         Id.     Campiti nonetheless claimed that he

had filed a timely notice of appeal based on either of two other

filings that he had made to the district court, as each of those

filings had been made within the required window of time.                Id.

                                       - 12 -
          The first filing was a motion for an extension of time

to file a notice of appeal.   Id.    The second filing was a motion

for appointment of counsel.   Id.

          We did not address whether the extension-of-time motion

was the functional equivalent of a notice of appeal because we

held that Campiti's appointment-of-counsel motion was.     Id.   We

concluded that, even assuming without deciding that our ruling in

Thomas survived Smith, Smith required that we treat Campiti's

motion for appointment of counsel as a notice of appeal.         See

Campiti, 333 F.3d at 320, 320 n.3.

          We reasoned that, under Smith, a filing constitutes the

functional equivalent of a notice of appeal "so long as it gives

the pertinent information [required by Rule 3] and evinces an

intention to appeal."     Campiti, 333 F.3d at 320.     We further

explained that "[w]hether a particular type of document is the

functional equivalent of a notice of appeal may depend on its

content and surrounding circumstances rather than on any general

rule."   Id.   Then, after having articulated these principles, we

concluded that the filing at hand both evidenced an intention to

appeal and gave the pertinent information.    Id.

          To support our conclusion, we noted that Campiti had

stated in his motion for appointment of counsel:

          I am the petitioner in the above captioned
          habeas corpus proceeding. My counsel, Vincent

                              - 13 -
               Bongiorni, Esq., has been allowed to withdraw
               by the court. I am indigent and hereby request
               that the court appoint counsel to represent me
               for the purposes of filing a notice of appeal
               and   a   request   for   a   certificate   of
               appealability.    A financial affidavit is
               attached for the court's consideration.

Id. Based on this statement, we concluded that the motion "plainly

evidences an intention to appeal" because it "asks for counsel to

be appointed" for specific purposes and then goes on explain that

the request is being made "'for the purposes of filing a notice of

appeal' and for requesting a certificate of appealability."                    Id.

And, with respect to whether the filing (which named the parties

in     the   caption)    contained     the     "pertinent     information,"     we

acknowledged that "[a]dmittedly, the document does not specify the

judgment     appealed    from    or   the   appellate   court[.]"       Id.     We

nonetheless concluded that "here, where no doubt exists as to

either, Rule 3 buttressed by latitude for a pro se litigant

forgives these 'informalit[ies] of form.'"                   Id. (alteration in

original) (quoting Fed. R. App. P. 3(c)(4)).

                                        C.

               How similar, then, is Cruzado's motion to Campiti's?             At

first blush, it may not seem similar at all.                   Cruzado's motion

sought an extension of time             to complete certain work,             while

Campiti's sought appointment of counsel.                Id.    Cruzado's motion

also    made    no   reference   to   filing    a   notice    of   appeal,    while

                                      - 14 -
Campiti's specified that appointment of counsel was being sought

for the "purposes of" filing such a notice.    Id.

          But, as mentioned above, Campiti makes clear that, after

Smith, the determination of whether a filing is the functional

equivalent of a notice to appeal "depend[s] on [the filing's]

content and surrounding circumstances rather than on any general

rule."   Id.     We must focus, therefore, on the "content and

surrounding circumstances," id., of the specific motion that

Cruzado filed.    And, for the reasons we will next explain, we

conclude that this case-specific inquiry shows that, given our

ruling in Campiti, Cruzado's motion is the functional equivalent

of a notice to appeal.   See Clark v. Cartledge, 829 F.3d 303, 306-

07 (4th Cir. 2016) (holding that a motion for an extension of time

to file an application for a COA was the functional equivalent of

a notice of appeal when the petitioner stated in his motion that

he had limited access to the prison-law library that "prevent[ed]

him from conducting the necessary legal research to properly file"

and stating that "to require more explicit language from a pro se

litigant would turn Smith's instruction that we liberally construe

Rule 3's requirements on its head" (alteration in original)).

                                 1.

          We recognize that Cruzado's motion on its face requested

only that the District Court take an action that, at most, would

                               - 15 -
have facilitated the later filing of a notice of appeal.    In that

respect, the motion would not appear to have "purported to place

the court and opposing party on notice that [Cruzado] was at that

time appealing," Thomas, 916 F.2d at 40 (emphasis added), in the

way that, say, an informal letter from a pro se prisoner requesting

an appeal would, or even the brief in Smith did.      Rather, like

the motion in Thomas, Cruzado's motion would appear to have at

most purported to notify the opposing party and the court of an

intention to file a notice of appeal after the memorandum of law

in support of the motion for the issuance of the COA had been

completed.   And, in that respect, Cruzado's motion would appear

to have been just as incapable of constituting a notice of appeal

as Thomas held the motion for an extension of time in that case

was.

           The motion in Campiti, however, did not purport to give

opposing counsel or the court notice that Campiti was appealing

"at [the] time [of the]" motion itself, Thomas, 916 F.2d at 40,

any more than the motion in Thomas did.     Rather, the motion in

Campiti expressly sought only to have counsel appointed for the

purpose of a notice of appeal thereafter being filed.      333 F.3d

at 320.   Yet, Campiti, based on Smith's observation that a notice

of appeal "must specifically indicate the litigant's intent to

                              - 16 -
seek appellate review," 502 U.S. at 248, held that the motion

Campiti filed did evidence his intent to appeal.       333 F.3d at 320.

           Thus,   what   mattered   in    Campiti   for   purposes    of

establishing the movant's intent to appeal was not whether -- as

Thomas held -- the motion made clear that no future filing would

be made that itself would be a notice of appeal.           What mattered

was whether the motion at issue evidenced the movant's intent to

appeal, even if the filing on its face contemplated that the

notice of appeal itself would be filed only later.          Campiti, 333

F.3d at 320.

           Our ruling in Campiti, unlike Thomas, both post-dates

and relies on the Supreme Court's ruling in Smith.           We thus do

not see how, given Campiti, we could hold that the mere fact that

Cruzado's motion sought action from the District Court that would

at most permit a later filing of a notice of appeal in and of

itself precludes that motion from qualifying as a notice of

appeal.   As a result, we conclude that, to the extent that Thomas

would require us to hold otherwise, it cannot survive Campiti.

See United States v. Guerrero, 19 F.4th 547, 552-53 (1st Cir.

2021) (outlining the law-of-the-circuit doctrine).

           Of   course,   even   after    Campiti,   the   "content   and

surrounding circumstances" of a filing must make it evident that

the litigant who made the filing "inten[ds] to appeal."         333 F.3d

                                 - 17 -
at 320 (citing Smith, 502 U.S. at 244, 248-49).    And a motion for

an extension of time to file a substantive memorandum in support

of a motion for issuance of a COA or to file a notice of appeal

does not necessarily evidence such an intent.     Depending on the

"content and surrounding circumstances," such a motion, like a

motion for appointment of counsel, may do no more than manifest

that the movant needs additional time to decide whether to appeal.

Id.   But we conclude that it is as evident from the "content and

surrounding circumstances" of Cruzado's specific motion that he

intended to appeal as it was from the "content and surrounding

circumstances" of Campiti's specific motion that Campiti intended

to do so.    Id.   And that is so even though Cruzado's motion made

no reference to a notice of appeal as such.

            We base this conclusion on the fact that Cruzado's

motion stated in relevant part: "[C]ounsel for [Cruzado] states

that due to a busy trial schedule, she is unable to complete the

Memorandum [of Law in Support of Issuance of COA] within the time

allotted" and that she sought an extension of time "from December

3, 2021 to December 10, 2021."    As this quoted text reveals, the

motion not only plainly sought the extension of time to "complete"

a memorandum of law in support of a COA but also sought the

extension to a date after the time for filing the notice of appeal

otherwise would have run.       Those features of the motion are

                                - 18 -
important for present purposes.   If Cruzado did not intend to file

the notice of appeal along with the request for the COA, then he

would have had no reason to seek to extend the time to complete

the work needed to file a COA to a date after the thirty-day time

limit for filing the notice of appeal would have run.      Therefore,

when we consider Cruzado's motion in context, it evidenced an

intention to appeal no less than the motion in Campiti did --

again, notwithstanding that Cruzado's motion, unlike Campiti's,

made no reference to a notice of appeal.

                                  2.

          All that said, Campiti makes clear that it is not enough

under Smith for a filing to evidence the movant's intent to appeal.

It must also contain the "pertinent information" specified in Rule

3 -- namely, the information that Rule 3 provides that a notice

of appeal must contain.    Campiti, 333 F.3d at 320.     As a result,

we now turn to the question of whether Cruzado's motion, like

Campiti's, contained the "pertinent information" required for a

filing to be deemed the functional equivalent of a notice of

appeal.   Id.   We conclude that Cruzado's motion did.

          First, Cruzado's motion named the parties to the appeal

because it named Cruzado and Alves in its caption.            Second,

although Cruzado's motion did not name the court to which Cruzado

intended to take his appeal, we agree that, consistent with

                               - 19 -
Smith's instruction to liberally construe the requirements of Rule

3, "failures to meet this requirement are excused where there is

only one court to which the appeal can be taken."           United States

v. Gooch, 842 F.3d 1274, 1277 (D.C. Cir. 2016); see Campiti, 333

F.3d at 320.   And so, because there is no other appellate court

to which Cruzado could have wanted to appeal but ours, we conclude,

as we did in Campiti in which the appellate court also was not

named but was equally obvious, id., that Rule 3's requirement that

a notice of appeal must "name the court to which the appeal is

taken" poses no     bar to   our deeming     the motion     at hand     the

functional equivalent of a notice of appeal.

           That brings us to the requirement in Rule 3(c)(1)(B)

that the notice of appeal must "designate the judgment -- or the

appealable order -- from which the appeal is taken."           Cruzado's

motion   nowhere   specifically   stated   that   Cruzado    intended   to

challenge the District Court's November 3, 2021, memorandum and

order denying his habeas petition.         But the motion did include

the District Court docket number on its face, and the motion for

an extension of time was the next filing on the docket after the

only substantive order by the District Court in this case --

which, as it happens, was the order denying Cruzado's habeas

petition -- and a companion order dismissing the case.         Therefore,

we conclude, consistent with Campiti, that Cruzado has met the

                                  - 20 -
requirement that a notice of appeal must designate the order from

which the appeal is being taken, as Cruzado's motion manifested

an intent to appeal, and the only order from which that intended

appeal could have been taken is the November 3, 2021, memorandum

and order denying his habeas petition.               See 333 F.3d at 320

(finding that Rule 3's requirement that the judgment appealed from

be specified to have been satisfied, despite the request for

counsel not specifically naming the judgment,                when no doubt

existed as to which judgment was being appealed); Becker v.

Montgomery, 532 U.S. 757, 767 (2001) ("[I]mperfections in noticing

an appeal should not be fatal where no genuine doubt exists about

who is appealing, from what judgment, to which appellate court.");

cf.    Bailey   v.   Cain,   609   F.3d    763,   766-67   (5th   Cir.   2010)

(concluding that a motion for an extension of time to file a COA

request could not be treated as a notice of appeal because it did

not identify the judgment or order being appealed in a case where

the District Court had entered four orders and a final judgment,

so it was not obvious which decision the petitioner sought to

challenge).

                                      3.

            There remains one last point to address: Campiti was a

pro se litigant while Cruzado, like the litigant in Thomas, is

not.    Alves contends that this distinction is dispositive, such

                                    - 21 -
that "[Cruzado's] motion for an extension of time to file a

memorandum in support of a request for COA should not be construed

as   the   functional    equivalent     of     a   notice   of    appeal   in   the

particular circumstances of this case."

            Alves is right that we have indicated that pro se

litigants     should     be   given     leniency        when     construing     the

requirements of Rule 3.        See Campiti, 333 F.3d at 320; Thomas,

916 F.2d at 40.        Nonetheless, Rule 3(c)(7)'s requirement that a

notice of appeal not be rejected "for informality of form or

title" applies to all litigants and does not draw distinctions

between those represented by counsel and those who are not.                     See

Bell v. Mizell, 931 F.2d 444, 445 (7th Cir. 1991) (liberally

construing an application for a certificate of probable cause --

the pre-Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996

("AEDPA"), Pub. L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214, equivalent of a

certificate    of      appealability     --        as   a   notice    of   appeal

notwithstanding the fact that the petitioner was represented by

counsel); Ortberg v. Moody, 961 F.2d 135, 137 (9th Cir. 1992);

Wells v. Ryker, 591 F.3d 562, 565 (7th Cir. 2010); Rodgers v. Wyo.

Att'y Gen., 205 F.3d 1201, 1205 (10th Cir. 2000) (concluding that

"the filings of counseled habeas petitioners should be given the

same liberal construction as those of                   pro se    petitioners"),

overruled on other grounds, Moore v. Marr, 254 F.3d 1235, 1239

                                      - 22 -
(10th Cir. 2001).   Thus, we reject Alves's contention that the

fact that Cruzado was represented by counsel provides a basis for

our concluding that his motion is not the functional equivalent

of a notice of appeal even though Campiti's was.    As the Seventh

Circuit has noted, however: "We do not condone the failure of

[appellant's] attorney to file a formal notice of appeal in timely

fashion -- and trust there will be no repetition of the oversight

by members of the bar of this [C]ourt[.]"   Bell, 931 F.2d at 445.2

                                D.

          For the reasons   set forth above, we conclude      that

Cruzado did file a timely notice of appeal.3   We do so, moreover,

     2 We do note that here there was potential confusion about
when the final order from which the appeal could be taken had
entered. See supra note 1.
     3 In order for us to have jurisdiction over an appeal from
the denial of a habeas petition, the petitioner must show not only
that a timely notice of appeal was filed pursuant to Federal Rule
of Appellate Procedure 3(a) but also that the district court has
issued a COA or that a COA must be issued by our Court. See 28
U.S.C. § 2253. Here, the District Court issued a COA on January
4, 2022, as to the due-process-based claim.        See Campiti v.
Matesanz, 333 F.3d 317, 319 (1st Cir. 2003) (accepting the district
court's grant of a certificate of appealability, even though the
grant occurred after Campiti's filing of the motion for appointment
of counsel); cf. United States v. Rodríguez-Rosado, 909 F.3d 472,
477 (1st Cir. 2018) ("[The divestiture rule] provides that filing
a notice of appeal, for the most part, shifts 'jurisdiction' from
the district court to the court of appeals. . . . But, because the
judge-made divestiture rule isn't based on a statute, it's not a
hard-and-fast jurisdictional rule. . . . The rule, rather, is
rooted in concerns of judicial economy, crafted by courts to avoid
the confusion and inefficiency that would inevitably result if two
courts at the same time handled the same issues in the same

                              - 23 -
even though the only filing that Cruzado timely made was the

filing on November 30, 2021, in which he sought merely an extension

of time to make another filing.        This conclusion is required

because that motion for an extension of time constituted the

functional equivalent of a notice of appeal under Campiti, as it

both evidenced an intent to appeal and contained the "pertinent

information," 333 F.3d at 320, no less than the motion at issue

in Campiti did.

                               III.

          We now turn to the merits of Cruzado's challenge to the

District Court's denial of his habeas petition.      The challenge

concerns only his due-process-based claim for habeas relief.

          Under AEDPA, Cruzado cannot show that he is entitled to

habeas relief based on his federal constitutional due-process

claim unless he can show that the SJC's ruling that rejected that

claim "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).   The

District Court held that Cruzado failed to make that showing.

Reviewing de novo, see Teti v. Bender, 507 F.3d 50, 56 (1st Cir.

2007), we agree.

case. . . . Hence its application turns on concerns of efficiency
and isn't mandatory." (quoting Griggs v. Provident Consumer Disc.
Co., 459 U.S. 56, 58 (1982))).

                              - 24 -
                                          A.

            In the state-court proceedings, the trial judge admitted

into evidence the unredacted recording of the police interview in

which Cruzado used the racial slur that provides the predicate

for his due-process-based claim.               The trial judge did so pursuant

to   a   principle    of    state   evidentiary       law    that    states   that

"[a]lthough the prosecution is not permitted to introduce evidence

of a defendant's bad character to show his or her 'propensity to

commit the crime charged, . . . such evidence may be admissible

if   relevant   for        some   other        purpose,'    including    motive."

Commonwealth v. Cruzado, 103 N.E.3d 732, 737 (Mass. 2018) (quoting

Commonwealth v. Howard, 16 N.E.3d 1054, 1069 (Mass. 2014)).                   The

trial judge explained that the unredacted recording constituted

evidence of partial motive (i.e., racial animus).                   Id. at 737-38.

            The SJC ruled that "the [trial] judge did not abuse her

discretion in determining that the probative value of the evidence

outweighed its prejudicial effect."               Id. at 738.    The SJC agreed

with the trial judge that the evidence of the unredacted police

interview did have special probative value in showing a potential

racial motive for Allen's killing, such that the recording of the

police interview could only be excluded if its special probative

value in showing such a motive was outweighed by its unduly

prejudicial effect.         See id. at 737-38.        But the SJC pointed out

                                     - 25 -
that to mitigate the prejudicial effect of the racial slur at

issue, the trial judge conducted an individual voir dire of

potential    jurors   to    eliminate     potential      bias.     Id.    at    738.

Furthermore, the SJC noted that although the trial judge did not

provide an instruction to the jury instructing the jurors to limit

the   use   that   they    could   make      of   the   racial   slur    in    their

deliberations, Cruzado did not request one, and "[t]here is no

requirement that the judge give limiting instructions sua sponte."

Id. (quoting Commonwealth v. Sullivan, 768 N.E.2d 529, 537 (Mass.

2002)).     Nor, the SJC went on to state, "does the lack of a

limiting instruction necessarily create a substantial likelihood

of a miscarriage of justice."           Id. (quoting Sullivan, 768 N.E.2d

at 537).

            As we mentioned above, the SJC also included a footnote

at the end of its discussion regarding the admission of the

recorded police interview.          That footnote stated in full: "The

defendant's argument that the admission of the word 'nigger' as

evidence of racial animus violated his due process rights is

unavailing, as the word came from his own mouth several times."

Id. at 738 n.2.

                                        B.

            Errors of state law, including the misapplication of

evidentiary rules, are "not enough to warrant federal habeas

                                    - 26 -
relief."   Coningford v. Rhode Island, 640 F.3d 478, 484 n.4 (1st

Cir. 2011).    But state-law evidentiary errors may be considered

as "part and parcel of the overarching constitutional claim" of a

denial of due process in some exceptional cases.              Id.       More

specifically, a "misbegotten evidentiary ruling that results in a

fundamentally unfair trial may violate due process and, thus,

ground federal habeas relief" when the state court's application

of state law is "so arbitrary or capricious as to constitute an

independent due process . . . violation."            Id. at 484 (quoting

Lewis v. Jeffers, 497 U.S. 764, 780 (1990)).

           Here, Cruzado argues that Massachusetts law barred the

unredacted recording in which he used the racial slur from being

admitted into evidence.      He then further contends that the SJC's

approval of the recording's admission resulted in a fundamentally

unfair trial that violated his federal due-process rights because

"serious evidentiary errors that result in a fundamentally unfair

trial can provide a basis for habeas relief, especially where such

errors infuse the trial with inflammatory prejudice."                   And,

finally,   Cruzado   argues    that    the   SJC's     decision   was     an

unreasonable   application    of   clearly   established   federal      due-

process law, given the nature of the "misbegotten evidentiary

                                   - 27 -
ruling" that he contends that the SJC blessed.4        Id.   We conclude,

however, that there is no merit to this contention.

          The   SJC   explained    that    although   Massachusetts   law

provides that "the prosecution is not permitted to introduce

evidence of a defendant's bad character to show his or her

propensity to commit the crime charged," "such evidence may be

admissible if relevant for some other purpose," including motive.

Cruzado, 103 N.E.3d at 737 (internal quotations omitted).             The

SJC then concluded -- reasonably in our judgment -- that Cruzado's

use of the racial slur in the police interview held substantial

probative value in demonstrating whether the crime may have been

partially motived by racial animus, given that the prosecution's

theory of the case was that Cruzado could have been angered to

     4 Alves argues in his briefing to us that Cruzado has waived
any argument on appeal that admission of the recording was an
"unreasonable application of[] clearly established Federal law,"
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), because Cruzado only argued to the District
Court that the admission of the recording was "contrary to . . .
clearly established Federal law," id. We cannot agree with Alves.
Even if Cruzado argued to the District Court only that admission
of the recording was contrary to clearly established federal law,
the argument that admission of the recording was an unreasonable
application of clearly established federal law was directly ruled
on by the District Court. Indeed, Alves even conceded during oral
argument that the District Court addressed both the "unreasonable
application of" and "contrary to" prongs of the AEDPA standard,
id., and the District Court ruled on both grounds. And Alves also
conceded during oral argument that "[s]ince the [D]istrict [C]ourt
addressed and passed on the ["unreasonable application of" ground]
directly, [Cruzado] is free to address [that ground] so raised in
this appeal." Fid. Coop. Bank v. Nova Cas. Co., 726 F.3d 31, 39
(1st Cir. 2013).

                                  - 28 -
the point of murder not just because he was touched by a gay man

but because he was touched by a gay, African-American man.

               Moreover, the SJC determined -- again, reasonably in

our view -- that admission of the recording to show motive was

not unduly prejudicial to Cruzado, both because the trial judge

conducted an individual voir dire of potential jurors to eliminate

potential bias, id. at 738; see also Commonwealth v. Alleyne, 54

N.E.3d 471, 479-80 (Mass. 2016) (discussing the use of voir dire

to mitigate prejudice); Commonwealth v. De La Cruz, 540 N.E.2d

168, 171 (Mass. 1989) ("[W]hen requested, we encourage individual

voir    dire    as   to   possible    juror    prejudice   based    on   ethnic

considerations."), abrogated on other grounds by Commonwealth v.

Colon, 121 N.E.3d 1157, 1173-77 (Mass. 2016), and because Cruzado

did not request a limiting instruction to disregard or otherwise

not infer anything from Cruzado's use of the racial slur.                In that

latter regard, the SJC reasonably explained both that "there is

no     requirement    that   the     [trial-court]   judge   give    limiting

instructions sua sponte," Cruzado, 103 N.E.3d at 738 (quoting

Sullivan, 768 N.E.2d at 537), and that, in light of the probative

value of the evidence that was admitted, "the lack of a limiting

instruction [does not] necessarily create a substantial likelihood

of a miscarriage of justice," id. (quoting Sullivan, 768 N.E.2d

at 537).       Thus, we see no basis for concluding that the SJC's

                                      - 29 -
determination that the trial judge did not violate Massachusetts

evidence     law   in   admitting   the   recording   represented    a

misapplication of Massachusetts evidence law, let alone that the

SJC's determination represented such an unreasonable application

of Massachusetts evidence law that it gave rise to a due-process

violation.

           Cruzado separately contends that the SJC's decision

unreasonably applied controlling Supreme Court precedent about

the right to due process because the SJC dismissed his due-process

claim in a single-sentence footnote that misstated the law.    Here,

he contends "that the footnote wrongly asserted that due process

concerns never arise where the prejudicial evidence comes from a

defendant's own statements."

           The footnote appears at the end of the SJC's discussion

regarding the admission of the recorded police interview.           It

states: "The defendant's argument that the admission of the word

'nigger' as evidence of racial animus violated his due process

rights is unavailing, as the word came from his own mouth several

times."    Id. at 738 n.2.

           If read out of context, this footnote might seem to

suggest, as Cruzado contends, that the admission into evidence of

a defendant's own statements cannot ground a due-process claim in

any circumstance, when in fact the admission into evidence of a

                                - 30 -
defendant's own statements violates due process under any number

of circumstances, including when they were made involuntary, see

United States v. Lawrence, 889 F.2d 1187, 1189 (1st Cir. 1989),

or in violation of Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).    But,

when the discussion in the footnote is read in the broader context

of the SJC's opinion, it is evident that Cruzado's contention is

without merit.    And that is so even if we were to assume that

Cruzado is arguing that, notwithstanding that the recording's

admission into evidence comported with Massachusetts state law,

its admission into evidence still violated his federal due-process

rights and the SJC unreasonably held otherwise.

            As previously mentioned, the relevant footnote comes at

the end of the SJC's discussion of its reasons for upholding the

trial judge's exercise of discretion to allow the recording into

evidence.    Cruzado, 103 N.E.3d at 738 n.2.   In that discussion,

the SJC, as we have already concluded, reasonably applied state

law to conclude, among other things, that the evidence had special

probative value and was not unduly prejudicial to Cruzado, such

that the state trial-court judge did not abuse her discretion to

admit the recording.    Id. at 736-38.   That discussion of why the

trial judge did not abuse her discretion to admit the recording

and did not misapply state evidentiary law would also explain why

Cruzado's due-process argument is unavailing.     Thus, because the

                               - 31 -
relevant footnote is appended to that discussion, we read the

footnote to be        saying    only that the defendant's due-process

argument fails because, in addition to all the reasons stated in

the   main   text    of   the    opinion,    the   racial   slur   "came   from

[Cruzado's] own mouth several times."                   Id. at 738 n.2; see

Commonwealth v. Spencer, 987 N.E.2d 205, 217 (Mass. 2013) ("An

extrajudicial statement made by a party opponent is an exception

to the rule against the introduction of hearsay, and is admissible

unless subject to exclusion on other grounds."); see also Ayala

v. Alves, 85 F.4th 36, 58 (1st Cir. 2023) ("Our 'highly deferential

standard for evaluating state court rulings' requires that we read

the SJC's opinion in such a way as to give its choice of language

'the benefit of the doubt.'" (quoting Woodford v. Visciotti, 537

U.S. 19, 24 (2002))).           Therefore, we conclude that there is no

merit to Cruzado's footnote-based argument for concluding that

the SJC unreasonably applied clearly established Supreme Court

precedent in rejecting his due-process claim.

                                       IV.

             For    the   foregoing   reasons,     we   affirm   the   District

Court's rejection of Cruzado's petition for habeas relief.                 The

parties shall bear their own costs.

                                      - 32 -