Case Information
*1 Before BARKETT, WILSON and MARTIN, Circuit Judges.
BARKETT, Circuit Judge:
Alonzo Lydell Burgess, an Alabama prisoner under sentence of death, appeals the district court’s order denying his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for a writ of habeas corpus, as well as the district court’s order denying his Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e) motion to alter or amend that denial. The district court rejected, without conducting an evidentiary hearing, Burgess’s claim that he is mentally retarded and that the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution categorically bars his execution pursuant to Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304, 321 (2002). The district court also rejected Burgess’s claim that his trial counsel was ineffective in investigating, preparing for, and presenting mitigating circumstances related to his mental health in the penalty phase of his trial. After a thorough review of the record and oral argument, we reverse the district court’s ruling as to Burgess’s Atkins claim and remand for an evidentiary hearing. Because we remand to the district court as to Burgess’s mental retardation, we need not resolve his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. Conner v. Hall, 645 F.3d 1277, 1294 (11th Cir. 2011).
I. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Burgess was convicted of capital murder on March 1, 1994, for the murders
of his girlfriend and two of her children. The jury recommend by a vote of 8 to 4 a
sentence of life without parole, but the trial court rejected the jury’s
recommendation and sentenced Burgess to death on March 21, 1994. Burgess’s
conviction and sentence were affirmed on direct appeal. See Burgess v. State, 723
So. 2d 742 (Ala. Crim. App. 1997), aff’d,
Burgess subsequently sought post-conviction relief pursuant to Alabama Rule of Criminal Procedure 32 in March, 2000, arguing, inter alia, that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to adequately investigate and present evidence relating to Burgess’s mental health. During the penalty phase of Burgess’s trial, the defense introduced some evidence regarding Burgess’s mental health as part of its theory of mitigation, focusing on his mental disorder and the history of mental illness in his family. At the time that Burgess filed his Rule 32 petition on March 15, 2000, the Supreme Court had not yet granted certiorari in Atkins, and so while Burgess’s petition and his subsequent requests for funds to hire mental health experts did express the need for further expert evaluation—including the need to “prescribe the appropriate psychological testing” to determine the existence of disabilities and to document them—the petition did not, of course, reference Atkins.
However, shortly before the hearing on Burgess’s Rule 32 petition was to
take place, the Supreme Court granted certiorari in Atkins and Burgess then sought
to amend the petition to specifically reference the Eighth Amendment claim that he
could not be executed because he was mentally retarded. He also asked the trial
court for funds to retain a mental health expert and asked that mental health experts
be granted access to him to conduct examinations. The state trial court denied both
motions, and no hearing was ever held on the Eighth Amendment claim, as the
Alabama trial court found that claim to be procedurally defaulted. Burgess v.
State,
Clemons v. State,
Because our review of the decisions of the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals and the district court requires a careful understanding of the evidence presented and the arguments Burgess advanced at each state of the proceedings, we will discuss each stage in greater detail before addressing the merits of Burgess’s appeal.
A. Evidence Presented During the Penalty Phase The sole defense witness to testify during the penalty phase of Burgess’s trial was Dr. John Goff, a neuropsychologist. The thrust of Dr. Goff’s testimony was that he had diagnosed Burgess as suffering from a “cyclothymic disorder,” less severe than bi-polar disorder but reflecting “that the patient has a substantial problem with fluctuating moods, going from episodes of elation and over stimulation, to episodes of being profoundly depressed.” However, in the course of his testimony Dr. Goff repeatedly indicated that his own assessment of Burgess had been difficult. He had met with Burgess for five hours, during which time he found it difficult to communicate with Burgess, whom he described as being in a manically excited state. He also repeatedly described the “collateral evidence” of Burgess’s educational and familial history as “sparse.” He cursorily stated that Burgess’s mother suffered from mental illness, that he had a dysfunctional family life, that at least one of his uncles beat him on a regular basis, that he had mentally retarded family members, and that he did poorly in school. Burgess’s school records were also introduced into evidence, demonstrating his poor academic performance over the course of his life: his need to repeat the first grade, his eventual placement into special education classes where he continued to do extremely poorly, and leaving school after the completion of the ninth grade with all failing grades with the exception of one D.
As to Burgess’s intellectual functioning, Dr. Goff explained that he had conducted no investigation into the matter and administered no intelligence testing. Rather, Dr. Goff testified that he had read the reports of a Dr. Shealy, an expert for the defense, and a Dr. Maier, an expert for the state. Dr. Shealy’s report indicated that he administered intelligence testing after Burgess’s arrest, from which he concluded that Burgess was “borderline mentally retarded.” [2] Dr. Goff also read into the record portions of a report written by Dr. Maier, who examined Burgess on behalf of the state. Dr. Maier did not report having administered any IQ testing, but rather “estimated” that Burgess’s intelligence was “below normal probably in the borderline range, IQ estimate somewhere between 70 and 80.” Dr. Maier further reported that Burgess “may even be mildly mentally retarded,” and found this to be consistent with Burgess’s “very limited educational and/or vocational achievements.”
B. The State Collateral Proceedings
Prior to his Rule 32 evidentiary hearing, Burgess sought funding for a mental health expert and a neurologist or neurobiologist, as well as permission from the court for experts to obtain access to the prison where he was incarcerated so that a mental health expert could “prescribe the appropriate psychological testing to determine the existence of any disabilities and, if they exist, to document them.” [3] He argued that the claims related to his mental health required the presentation of additional expert evidence that was not developed at trial, and that without access to experts he would be prevented from developing the proof of his claims at the state collateral evidentiary hearing. The state opposed Burgess’s motions seeking to further develop the record, arguing that further mental health evaluations were not necessary because Burgess already had three mental health evaluations by the time of his trial. As noted, those experts conducted almost no inquiry into whether Burgess was mentally retarded. The trial court denied his requests for funds for experts, and also denied his request that experts be granted access to him for the purpose of conducting further mental health evaluations.
Also prior to his Rule 32 evidentiary hearing, in response to the granting of certiorari in Atkins, Burgess filed an amended petition including a claim that the Eighth Amendment barred his execution because of his mental retardation. The Rule 32 evidentiary hearing was conducted on February 25, 2002, four months before the Supreme Court issued its opinion in Atkins. Shortly before the evidentiary hearing on February 25, in response to the trial court’s request that the parties indicate their positions on the issues set for the hearing, Burgess’s counsel submitted a letter to the trial court stating,
I would like to emphasize that those claims raised in Mr. Burgess’s Rule 32 petition that require the presentation of additional evidence are largely built around the need for appropriate expert assistance which was not developed at trial. Since this Court has denied Mr. Burgess’s motions for funds to procure such expert assistance, Mr. Burgess is prevented from developing many of his claims at the evidentiary hearing.
As noted, the state consistently opposed Burgess’s requests to obtain further expert
evaluation, arguing that the prior evaluations of Drs. Goff, Shealy, and Maier, were
sufficient. As the trial court had already denied Burgess’s motions to present new
mental health evidence, Burgess was then left with resting his claim on the
evidence already in the record. Thus, at that hearing, no evidence was presented
as to Burgess’s Eighth Amendment claim. The Supreme Court issued its opinion
in Atkins in June 2002, and six months later, in its January 1, 2003 opinion, the
trial court rejected Burgess’s Atkins claim as procedurally defaulted and dismissed
the claim without addressing its merits. See Burgess,
In his first court filing following Atkins, Burgess appealed the denial of his
Rule 32 petition to the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals, again asserting that his execution was barred by the Eighth Amendment and that his counsel was ineffective in failing to present the evidence sufficient to establish this fact. In addition to arguing as best he could that the existing record evidence nonetheless established that he was mentally retarded, Burgess also argued that the trial court’s denial of his request for funds for expert assistance, as well as precluding mental health experts from obtaining access to him in prison, “prevented [him] from adequately developing [this claim] during his Rule 32 hearing.” He further maintained that “now that Atkins has declared unconstitutional the execution of the mentally retarded, this Court must permit the development of the record on Mr. Burgess’s mental retardation.”
Although the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals ruled that the circuit court
erred in finding Burgess’s Atkins claim defaulted, it denied his claim on the merits,
stating that after reviewing the paper record there was “no indication that Burgess
meets the definition of mental retardation adopted by the Alabama Supreme Court
in Ex parte Perkins,
The basis of the Court of Criminal Appeals ruling was a “finding” that
Burgess’s IQ was between 70 and 80, as well as findings that: Burgess had
completed the ninth grade; had completed one year at a training school; worked as
a welder while incarcerated in Mississippi; was cooperative when interviewed by a
probation officer; was a “normal child who was considerate, compassionate, and
caring;” had a brother who was mentally retarded; and had been in a relationship
with the victim. Burgess,
C. Federal Habeas Proceedings
Burgess next filed a petition in federal court seeking a writ of habeas corpus. Before the district court, Burgess proffered an affidavit from Dr. Bryan Hudson, a neuropsychologist, containing new expert testimony related to his Atkins claim. After conducting testing and a thorough review of Burgess’s history, he concluded “to a reasonable degree of psychological certainty that Mr. Alonzo Burgess is a mentally retarded person.” The district court refused to consider this affidavit, or to grant Burgess an evidentiary hearing on his Atkins claim because, “[d]uring the post-conviction proceedings, Burgess argued that all of the evidence necessary to support his mental-retardation claim was located in the trial court record, and he offered the trial court record as the sole support for his claim.” Notwithstanding that Burgess had asked for and been refused funds to pay for a mental evaluation and been denied permission for experts to gain access to him in the prison in order to obtain and present evidence, the district court found that Burgess had “failed, without explanation, to develop and present [the affidavit] in the first instance to the state court.” As to the state court’s determination that Burgess was not mentally retarded, the district court found that, based on the trial record, “Burgess’s IQ scores placed him in the category of borderline intellectual functioning or borderline mentally retarded,” and that “the Alabama court’s finding that Burgess was not mentally retarded is not an unreasonable finding based on the evidence.”
II. DISCUSSION
A. Whether the Ruling of the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals is Entitled to Deference under AEDPA
The question before us is a narrow one. Specifically, we must decide
whether the Alabama Court of Appeals erroneously determined that Burgess was
not mentally retarded based upon only the record before that court. In reviewing a
district court’s denial of a habeas petition, we review questions of law and mixed
questions of law and fact de novo, and findings of fact for clear error. Conner v.
Sec’y, Fl. Dep’t of Corr.,
After careful review of the record before the state court, we disagree with
the district court and hold that the ruling of Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals
that Burgess is not mentally retarded was an “unreasonable determination of the
facts” in this case. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2). In applying Atkins and the
substantive test established in Ex parte Perkins, the critical underpinning of the
Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals’ decision was its conclusion that Burgess’s IQ
was between 70 and 80. Burgess v. State,
It is also impossible to reconcile with the record the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals’ finding that Burgess failed to demonstrate significant deficits in adaptive behavior. Citing to evidence presented in mitigation at trial which essentially amounted to “good character” evidence, the state court noted that Burgess labored as a welder while in Mississippi prison, that a prison guard described him as “industrious, orderly and obedient,” that he was “cooperative” with a probation officer, that he reported working as a brick mason at some point in time, and that witnesses gave statements that he was a caring child. But this evidence was presented in an entirely different context and without the benefit of any explanation of how it would or would not be consistent with mental retardation, and therefore does not indicate anything substantive about Burgess’s adaptive abilities as that term is used clinically. Nor does it take into account that even the state expert, Dr. Maier, specifically noted both that Burgess “may even be mildly mentally retarded,” and that that finding would be consistent with Burgess’s poor adaptive skills: his poor school performance and his lack of vocational success.
While the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals found that Burgess had
completed ninth grade, and that this was evidence of healthy adaptive abilities, the
record before them reflected a very different picture. While it is true that Burgess
attended school through ninth grade, his performance was very poor: he repeated
the first grade, usually received failing grades, and eventually was placed in special
education classes where he still received failing grades. In ninth grade he received
all F’s but for a lone D. His standardized test scores reveal an even more striking
picture, at times scoring as low as in the lowest 3% or 4% nationally. Thus, the
evidence relied on by the state court in making its finding that Burgess did not
demonstrate deficits in adaptive behavior either contradicted that finding or was
presented in such a different context that it cannot meaningfully support the
finding. See Bobby v. Bies,
Although the Atkins Court instructed states to develop standards for
identifying mentally retarded defendants, it was also instructive regarding the
nature of the factual inquiry to be undertaken. The Court explained that the reason
those suffering from mental retardation should not be executed, even when they
“meet the law’s requirements for criminal responsibility” is “[b]ecause of their
disabilities in areas of reasoning, judgment, and control of their impulses . . . they
do not act with the level of moral culpability that characterizes the most serious
adult criminal conduct.”
The State argues that Burgess’s Atkins claim is foreclosed by Carroll v.
Sec’y Fl. Dep’t Corr.,
The State also argues that, to the extent the record is insufficient, that
insufficiency should be held against Burgess. Under the narrow facts of this case,
we cannot agree. At the time of Burgess’s trial, sentencing, and direct appeal,
Penry v. Lynaugh,
Furthermore, contrary to the State’s assertion that Burgess at all times
maintained that the trial court record, standing alone, was sufficient to prove his
Atkins claim, Burgess consistently argued that to fully litigate his claim additional
expert evidence was required. His arguments based upon the existing record
were made only after his requests to expand the record were denied, and he clearly
maintained before the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals that “now that Atkins
has declared unconstitutional the execution of the mentally retarded, this Court
must permit the development of the record on Mr. Burgess’s mental retardation.”
While the state was not required to grant Burgess’s requests to obtain and present
additional evidence, see Carroll,
We hold that the state court’s determination that Burgess is not mentally retarded is an unreasonable determination of fact because it was based upon a combination of erroneous factual findings directly contradicted by the record and a record that was insufficient to support its conclusions. Accordingly, we vacate the district court’s contrary finding and its denial of Burgess’s petition.
B. Whether Burgess was Entitled to an Evidentiary Hearing
Because we have determined that the finding by the Alabama Court of
Criminal Appeals that Burgess is not mentally retarded is not entitled to AEDPA
deference, the district court erred in deferring to that conclusion. Accordingly, we
must address whether the district court also erred in refusing to hold an evidentiary
hearing. Burgess argues that an evidentiary hearing was necessary for him to
effectively present his Atkins claim. Specifically, he argues that the district court
erred in failing to consider the affidavit of Dr. Bryan Hudson and refusing to grant
a hearing in which Dr. Hudson could testify. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2) prohibits a
district court from holding an evidentiary hearing on a claim if the petitioner has
failed to develop the factual basis for the claim in state court, absent certain narrow
circumstances. However, because § 2254(e)(2) only prohibits hearings where the
petitioner has “failed to develop” the factual basis in state court, if the petitioner
was diligent in developing the record in the state habeas proceedings, “a federal
court may grant an evidentiary hearing without further regard for the provisions of
§ 2254(e)(2).” Ward v. Hall,
In a case where the petitioner has diligently attempted to present the factual
basis for his claim, we then review the district court’s denial of an evidentiary
hearing in a habeas case for abuse of discretion. Schriro v. Landrigan, 550 U.S.
465, 473 (2007); see also 28 U.S.C. § 2254, Rule 8(a) (“[T]he judge must review
the answer [and] any transcripts and records of state-court proceedings . . . to
determine whether an evidentiary hearing is warranted”). The district court abuses
its discretion where “such a hearing could enable an applicant to prove the
petition’s factual allegations, which, if true, would entitle the applicant to federal
habeas relief.” Schriro,
Here, Burgess was diligent in presenting his Atkins claim. As the Supreme Court has explained: “Diligence [for purposes of § 2254(e)] depends upon whether the prisoner made a reasonable attempt, in light of the information available at the time, to investigate and pursue claims in state court,” Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 420, 435 (2000) (emphasis added), and “will require in the usual case that prisoner, at a minimum, seek an evidentiary hearing in state court,” id. at 437. Prior to Atkins, Burgess sought to obtain and introduce additional evidence of his mental condition. As discussed above, prior to Atkins, Burgess could not have been
expected to necessarily present evidence sufficient to support an Atkins claim
because such evidence constituted a double edged sword and, further, because
Alabama had no existing legal standard for mental retardation for Burgess to argue
he met. The Atkins case itself was remanded for further findings as to whether
Atkins was mentally retarded.
Once Atkins was decided, Burgess renewed his efforts to introduce
additional evidence into the record. He argued to the Alabama Court of Criminal
Appeals that he could not fully litigate his Atkins claim without additional expert
testimony and requested that he be allowed to present that testimony in the first
instance. The fact that at this point Burgess did not have an expert affidavit to
proffer should not be held against him. He had been denied his request to have any
expert, even one procured independently of state funds, be allowed access to him
for the purposes of conducting a full evaluation. Despite this denial, the record
was clear as to what type of evidence he sought to present: expert testimony by a
witness who could conduct neurological and psychological testing and evaluate his
mental health and intellectual functioning. He continued to make this argument in
his request for rehearing and in his application for certiorari to the Alabama
Supreme Court. The district court’s finding that Burgess had not been diligent,
(“Burgess failed, without explanation, to develop and present [expert testimony] in
the first instance to the state court”), was clearly erroneous. We note that other
circuits have found that petitioners in similar positions to Burgess (petitioners
whose state collateral hearings were completed prior to Atkins but who raised
colorable claims post-Atkins) were entitled to evidentiary hearings in federal court.
See, e.g., Allen v. Buss,
The remaining question is whether a hearing could have enabled Burgess to prove his petition’s factual allegations, and thereby entitled him to federal habeas relief. We find that it could have. As Atkins left to the states the task of
developing their own standards for determining mental retardation, 536 U.S. at
317, it is Alabama’s standard, announced in Ex parte Perkins, which governs
Burgess’s Atkins claim. Thomas v. Allen,
III. CONCLUSION
Having determined that we must vacate the district court’s judgment
denying Burgess’s petition and remand for further proceedings on his claim of
mental retardation, “it is unnecessary for us to decide anything regarding the
[ineffective assistance of counsel] claim . . . . Our remand is not limited but is
instead a remand of the entire case.” Conner v. Hall,
Notes
[1] In referring to “mental retardation” throughout this opinion, we recognize that increasingly professionals in this field, such as the American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (formerly the American Association on Mental Retardation), are replacing the term “mental retardation” with “intellectual disability” or “intellectual developmental disability.” In this opinion, however, we use the term “mental retardation” to maintain consistency with the terminology used throughout Burgess’s appeal and relevant precedent.
[2] Dr. Goff did not testify as to the numeric score Dr. Shealy obtained, which was a Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised (WAIS-R) IQ score of 66.
[3] Burgess needed a court order for mental experts to enter Holman state prison, where he was housed, because the prison would not permit psychologists, psychiatrists, or other mental health professionals to evaluate him without one.
[4] In his amended petition Burgess requested (1) “a full evidentiary hearing at which [he] may offer proof concerning the allegation of [the amended] petition” and (2) that the court “provide [him] . . . with sufficient funds to present . . . experts, and other evidence in support of the allegations in his petition.”
[5] The trial court also denied relief as to Burgess’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim. See id. at 286-94.
[6] As noted in the affidavit of Dr. Bryan Hudson, which Burgess asked the district court to consider, the fact that a family member suffers from mental retardation actually supports a finding of mental retardation in Burgess. Dr. Hudson’s affidavit explains: Mr. Burgess’s family history is consistent with several possible etiologies of mental retardation. His family history is positive for mental illness, cognitive and learning deficits. It has been reported that Mr. Burgess’[s] uncle, Billy is significantly limited, and may even be mentally retarded. Mr. Burgess’[s] uncle, Howard has two sons who are mentally retarded. In addition, Mr. Burgess’[s] son is mentally retarded . . . . To the degree that the early learning environment plays a significant role in the phenotype or genetic expression of factors related to the development of intelligence, Mr. Burgess was not afforded the exposures that would have been conducive to appropriate development of the likely attenuated biological template of intelligence with which he was born.
[7] As revealed in Dr. Hudson’s affidavit presented to the district court, Dr. Shealy actually found Burgess to have a Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale Revised (WAIS-R) IQ score of 66.
[8] The American Psychiatric Association explains that the term “mild” mental retardation is typically used to describe people with an IQ level of 50-55 to approximately 70. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 42-43 (rev. 4th ed. 2000).
[9] As the Supreme Court recognized in Atkins, mental retardation is fundamentally a
“clinical” diagnosis.
[10] The Court also noted that a defendant’s mental retardation is likely to substantively
impair their abilities to present a compelling mitigation case in the first instance: “The risk that
‘the death penalty will be imposed in spite of factors which may call for a less severe penalty,’
Locket v. Ohio,
[11] For example, in his brief before the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals, the first of his post-Atkins filings, he argued that “thorough review by this Court is precluded due to the fatally incomplete and erroneous record on appeal.” Noting that “[t]he services of mental health and neurological experts were sought to assist counsel and the court in discerning, documenting, interpreting, and presenting evidence in support of . . . his claim that his mental retardation renders him ineligible for the death penalty,” he further argued that “[w]ithout the assistance of expert testimony during his Rule 32 hearing, [he] was prevented from adequately proving” his Atkins claim.
[12] 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2) states in full: If the applicant has failed to develop the factual basis of a claim in State court proceedings, the court shall not hold an evidentiary hearing on the claim unless the applicant shows that— (A) the claim relies on— (i) a new rule of constitutional law, made retroactive to cases on collateral review by the Supreme Court, that was previously unavailable; or (ii) a factual predicate that could not have been previously discovered through the exercise of due diligence; and (B) the facts underlying the claim would be sufficient to establish by clear and convincing evidence that but for constitutional error, no reasonable factfinder would have found the applicant guilty of the underlying offense.
[13] Later, in Smith v. State
,
the Alabama Supreme Court added an additional element to
the definition by stating that a defendant must exhibit significantly subaverage intellectual
functioning abilities and significant deficits in adaptive behavior during three periods of his life:
before the age of eighteen, on the date of the capital offense, and currently. __ So. 2d __, No.
1060427,
[14] “The two most widely recognized and utilized intellectual functioning assessment
instruments are the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scales (‘WAIS’) and the Stanford-Binet
Intelligence Scales.” Thomas,
[15] “When considering an individual’s intellectual functioning test score, the evaluator may consider the Standard Error of Measurement (‘SEM’), which is an index of the variability of test scores produced by persons forming the normative sample. In other words, the SEM is a statistical measure that allows the evaluator to know the amount of error that could be present in any test. The AAMR acknowledges that the SEM has been estimated to be three to five points for well-standardized measures of general intellectual functioning. Hence, the IQ standard score is bounded by a range that would be approximately three to four points above and below the obtained scores.” Thomas, 607 at 753. Here, Dr. Hudson stated that a SEM of five points would be appropriate, establishing a range of 71 to 81.
[16] “An evaluator may also consider the ‘Flynn effect,’ a method that recognizes the fact
that IQ test scores have been increasing over time. The Flynn effect acknowledges that as an
intelligence test ages, or moves farther from the date on which it was standardized, or normed,
the mean score of the population as a whole on that assessment instrument increases, thereby
artificially inflating the IQ scores of individual test subjects. Therefore, the IQ test scores must
be recalibrated to keep all test subjects on a level playing field.” Thomas,
[17] As noted previously, the American Psychiatric Association explains that the term “mild” mental retardation is typically used to describe people with an IQ level of 50-55 to approximately 70. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 42-42 (4th ed. 2000).
