This case is before the Court on appeal from an order denying a motion to vacate a judgment of conviction of first-degree murder and a sentence of death under Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.851. Because the order concerns postconviction relief from a capital conviction for which a sentence of death was imposed, this Court has jurisdiction of the appeal under article V, section 3(b)(1), Florida Constitution. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the postconviction court’s order denying relief.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The facts of the underlying case are set out in this Court’s opinion on Clark’s direct appeal and are as follows:
On the afternoon of January 13, 1990 two teenagers walking down a dirt road in rural Duval County found a crowbar, some broken false teeth, a bloody shirt, and some blank checks, with the name Ronald Willis printed on them, that also had blood on them. One of the boys returned home and told his mother what they had found, and she called the sheriffs office. Also on the 13th Willis’ mother called his ex-wife to see if she knew of Willis’ whereabouts. The ex-wife did not, and she and her sister began driving around looking for him. They found Willis’ truck at a motel, parked near it, and started calling his name. A small child was in the truck, and a man identifying himself as the child’s father removed the child and pointed out Ronald Clark and John Hatch as the people who had been driving the truck. The ex-wife took the keys and locked the truck while her sister went to telephone the police. Clark approached the ex-wife, grabbed her, and tried to take the keys. When she kicked him, he ran away. The sister ran after Clark and noticed that he was wearing Willis’ cowboy boots. Clark and Hatch ran off before the police arrived. They had been identified, however, and the police arrested Hatch in Nassau County on January 20, 1990.
Hatch described the events of January 12 to 13 as follows. When he arrived home after work on January 12, Clark was at his house. They decided to hitchhike to Jacksonville to shoot pool. Along the way they shot at signs and beer bottles with a pistol Hatch had stolen from a house he had been remodeling. Willis stopped to give them a ride, and, during the ride, Clark whispered to Hatch that he was going to steal the truck. When Hatch asked Wil *884 lis to stop the truck, both he and Clark got out of the truck, and Clark, who had the stolen pistol, shot Willis seven or eight times. Clark shoved Willis’ body to the center of the seat, Hatch got in the passenger’s seat, and Clark drove to a more secluded area. Clark pulled Willis’ body from the truck, during which Willis’ shirt came off. Clark then took Willis’ wallet and boots and pushed his body into a ditch. Clark and Hatch went to a restaurant and to Hatch’s ex-wife’s apartment complex, but later returned to where they had left the body. Taking the body with them, they went to Clark’s father’s house and got a rope and several cinder blocks. They then drove to the Nassau County Sound Bridge, tied the blocks to the body, and dumped it into the water. After driving around some more, they went to an acquaintance’s house to buy drugs. The acquaintance went with them to the motel where Willis’ ex-wife and her sister found the truck. Hatch and Clark left the state, eventually winding up in South Carolina. Hatch returned to Nassau County, where he was arrested. South Carolina authorities arrested Clark on February 7, 1990 and returned him to Florida.
The state indicted Clark for first-degree murder and armed robbery and tried him on those charges in January 1991. Hatch, in exchange for a twenty-five-year sentence, testified against Clark. Clark testified on his own behalf that Hatch killed Willis. The jury convicted Clark of armed robbery and felony murder. During the penalty phase, Clark refused to allow his attorney to present any mitigating evidence. The jury recommended that Clark be sentenced to death. On February 20 both sides argued their views on sentencing with defense counsel arguing that Clark should be sentenced to life imprisonment rather than death. The court disagreed, however, and sentenced Clark to death two days later.
Clark v. State,
Clark first filed a motion to vacate his sentence pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850 on November 16, 1994. Clark filed supplemental and amended motions, ending with his Second *885 Amended Motion to Vacate Judgment of Conviction and Sentence and Supplement to Amended Motion filed January 31, 2006. 3
Prior to Clark’s conviction in Duval County, he was tried and convicted in Nassau County for the murder of Charles Carter.
Clark v. State,
There is no doubt from the record herein that the Defendant led a hard and difficult life. His early childhood experiences of being abused by his mother’s lesbian lover or having to witness physical abuse and violence between his parents was unfortunate. However, there is nothing in his background that would serve to mitigate the murder herein.
Based on this, defense counsel Davis determined the mitigating evidence “cut both ways” and, along with Clark, decided not to present mitigation at the Duval County trial. Clark asserts that the mitigation presented in the Nassau County case was virtually identical to what would have been presented in the Duval County case.
ISSUES
Clark appeals the denial of postconviction relief to this Court raising three issues. He contends (1) trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate and present evidence that Hatch was the shooter; (2) trial counsel was ineffective for failing to present mitigation at the penalty phase of his trial or, alternatively, for failing to convince Clark that he needed to present mitigation; and (8) there is newly discovered evidence that Hatch confessed to being the shooter in the Duval County murder, which Clark claims entitles him to a new trial. For the reasons expressed below, we affirm the posteonviction court’s denial of Clark’s 8.851 motion.
ANALYSIS
Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
As it relates to ineffective assistance of counsel, Clark first alleges counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate and present evidence that Hatch was the shooter. Next, Clark alleges that counsel was ineffective for failing to present evidence in support of mitigation. We find both these arguments without merit.
Generally, this Court’s standard of review following a denial of a postcon-viction claim where the trial court has conducted an evidentiary hearing affords deference to the trial court’s factual findings. “[A]s long as the trial court’s findings are supported by competent substantial evidence, this Court will not ‘substitute its judgment for that of the trial court on questions of fact, likewise of the credibility of the witnesses as well as the weight to be given to the evidence by the trial court.’ ”
McLin v. State,
Relating to Clark’s first claim, following the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Strickland, v. Washington,
As to the first prong, the defendant must establish that “counsel made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the ‘counsel’ guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment.”
Strickland,
Additionally, there is a strong presumption that trial counsel’s performance was not ineffective.
See id.
at 690,
With respect to the investigation and presentation of mitigation evidence, the United States Supreme Court observed in
Wiggins v. Smith,
Regarding the waiver of the right to present mitigating evidence, “[w]e have upheld the right of similarly situated defendants to refuse to participate in the sentencing proceeding.”
Clark,
In its September 2007 order denying relief, the postconviction court found:
Initially this Court notes that the Defendant, having raised this claim on direct appeal, is procedurally barred from raising it again in a motion for post-conviction relief. Moreover, the record supports that the trial court adequately *888 inquired into the Defendant’s decision to waive mitigation.
At the evidentiary hearing, trial counsel Davis, specifically addressed the Defendant’s ineffective assistance of counsel claims. Davis testified that it was his trial strategy not to present mitigation evidence from the Nassau County case in the Duval County case because the mitigation evidence “cut both ways.” One example of mitigation evidence cutting both ways, was that the Defendant would kill animals for the sport of it, and Davis could tell from the reaction of the Nassau County jurors that the testimony was having the opposite effect of its intended purpose. He also explained that because the Nassau County case was stronger than the Duval County case, neither he nor the Defendant thought it would be beneficial to present the mitigation evidence in the weaker case when it did not work in a stronger case. Davis testified that had the Defendant wanted to present mitigation evidence, he would have presented it to the jury.
As it relates to the claim that counsel was ineffective during the guilt phase, the postconviction court found:
To the extent the Defendant claims that Davis should have contacted or presented witnesses, the Defendant’s claim is denied pursuant to Nelson v. State,875 So.2d 579 , 583-84 (Fla.2004), as the Defendant’s claim in facially insufficient. To the extent the Defendant claims an investigator should have been hired, this claim must also be denied.... Davis testified that he hired an investigator to help him find witnesses....
The postconviction court also found that Clark did not establish that Davis was deficient for failing to present evidence to demonstrate that Hatch was the shooter because “Davis testified that had there been a basis to show that Hatch was the shooter, [he] would have developed that evidence.”
Finally, regarding Clark’s claims that Davis was ineffective for failing to present evidence of Clark’s intoxication and his long-standing substance abuse and for failing to call experts to cast doubt on the physical evidence in the case, the postcon-viction court found that Clark failed to prove these claims.
Clark alleges that counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate and present evidence that Hatch was the shooter. At the evidentiary hearing, Clark presented no evidence to support this claim. Trial counsel cannot be ineffective for failing to present evidence that did not exist at the time of trial.
See, e.g., Pooler v. State,
Although Clark alleges that “the record is replete with evidence that Mr. Hatch was the shooter and leader,” the record does not support his allegation. As stated in this Court’s opinion on direct appeal, “the record contains competent, substantial evidence to support [Clark’s] conviction.”
Clark,
Next, Clark alleges that counsel was ineffective for failing to present mitigation. Clark raised this as claim 7 in his first amended 3.850 motion filed November 1, 1995. In its June 18, 1996, order on Clark’s motion to vacate judgments of conviction and sentence, the post-conviction court found this claim to be without merit and undeserving of a hear *889 ing. 4 In this order, the postconvietion court granted an evidentiary hearing on four claims. On June 20, 2003, Clark filed a supplement to the first amended motion to vacate, raising one claim, and on January 31, 2006, filed a second amended motion, raising twenty-one claims. Of these claims, the postconviction court granted an evidentiary hearing on claims 1, 2, and 3, which it stated mirrored the claims for which the court had previously awarded an evidentiary hearing. 5
Clark alleges that his counsel was ineffective for failing to present mitigation at the penalty phase of his trial or, alternatively, for failing to convince Clark that he needed to present mitigation. We previously found that Clark made a knowing, intelligent waiver of his right to present mitigation.
Clark,
In
Koon v. Dugger,
[C]ounsel must inform the court on the record of the defendant’s decision. Counsel must indicate whether, based on his investigation, he reasonably believes there to be mitigating evidence that could be presented and what that evidence would be. The court should then require the defendant to confirm on the record that his counsel has discussed these matters with him, and despite counsel’s recommendation, he wishes to waive presentation of penalty phase evidence.
Id.
at 250;
see also Anderson v. State,
In
Lewis,
this Court made it clear that a defendant cannot make a knowing, intelligent waiver where counsel has not had adequate time to prepare mitigation.
In
Larzelere,
we agreed with the post-conviction court’s ruling that “Larzelere’s waiver could not have been made knowingly and intelligently because her counsel was unable to adequately advise her regarding potential mitigation,” and that counsel’s performance was deficient because counsel did not sufficiently investigate possible mitigation.
In
Spann v. State,
Also dissimilar is our analysis in
Gill v. State,
Additionally, this is not a case where the trial court did not consider mitigation evidence present in the record. The record establishes that trial counsel presented the *891 mitigating evidence at the Spencer 6 hearing and that the trial court considered the reports from mental health experts in the record.
Even if we allowed Clark to pierce his waiver, he cannot show counsel was deficient. Davis testified that the mitigating evidence collected “cut both ways.” He further testified that both he and Clark agreed it would not be beneficial to present such evidence in the “weaker” case. Because counsel did not fail to investigate mitigation, and because Clark was found competent, Davis cannot be found deficient for his strategy.
Finally, Clark has failed to establish prejudice. The exact same mitigation was presented in the Nassau County trial, which led to the imposition of the death penalty. Although that conviction was overturned by this Court on direct appeal, this Court did not find that the trial court improperly rejected all the mitigation presented. Instead, we overturned the sentence because we found several of the ag-gravators unsupported by the record.
Clark,
Newly Discovered Evidence
Clark raised this claim at the evidentiary hearing below, to which the State objected both procedurally and on the merits. In its order denying relief, the postconviction court found Clark’s claim “untimely in that the Defendant failed to raise this newly discovered evidence claim within one year of learning of its existence.” The court noted that Clark waited two years to raise the claim. Further, the postconviction court found that Clark “failed to establish that this evidence would have been admissible at [his] trial” and that “Thompson’s 7 testimony was not of such nature that it would probably produce an acquittal for the Defendant on retrial, especially in light of Thompson’s credibility issues.”
With respect to a trial court’s ruling on a newly discovered evidence claim following an evidentiary hearing, as long as the court’s findings are supported by competent, substantial evidence, a reviewing court will not “substitute its judgment for that of the trial court on questions of fact, likewise of the credibility of witnesses as well as the weight to be given to the evidence by the trial court,”
Blanco v. State,
This Court has held that two requirements must be met in order for a conviction to be set aside on the basis of newly discovered evidence: (1) to be considered newly discovered, the asserted evidence must have been unknown by the trial court, by the party, or by counsel at the time of trial, and it must appear that the defendant or defense counsel could not have known of it by the use of due diligence; and (2) the newly discovered evidence must be of such a nature that it would probably produce an acquittal on retrial.
Jones v. State,
Clark alleges newly discovered evidence that Hatch confessed to being the shooter in the Duval County murder for which Clark was convicted. Because Clark failed to raise this claim within one year of discovering it and, in fact, failed to raise this claim in his pleadings at all, this claim is denied as procedurally barred.
Clark did not raise this allegation in any of his numerous pleadings below. Instead, this claim was raised at the evidentiary hearing over the State’s objection. The court noted it would address Clark’s motion to “conform the pleadings to the evidence” in its order. 8
Claims of newly discovered evidence must be raised within one year of the time of discovery. Fla. R.Crim. P. 3.851(d)(2)(A);
Glock v. Moore,
Finally, even if the Court accepts Clark’s claim as timely filed, Clark cannot establish that the evidence, if presented at a new trial, would probably produce an acquittal. Thompson testified that Hatch admitted he shot someone after a drug deal gone bad, that Hatch had testified against Clark to save his own life, that the victim owed one of them money and had pulled a gun on them, and that Hatch had thrown the victim’s body in the canal. Thompson did not testify regarding the name of the victim, the time of the murder, or any other information that would clearly exonerate Clark in the murder. The information alleged to have been provided by Hatch to Thompson does not create sufficient doubt that Hatch was the shooter instead of Clark.
The record indicates that the evidence presented against Clark at trial was summarized by the trial judge as follows:
On January 12, 1990, Ronald Wayne Clark and John David Hatch were hitchhiking from Yulee to Jacksonville, Florida to drink beer and shoot pool. At that time, Ronald Willis, who also lived in Yulee, was driving his pickup truck to Jacksonville.
The victim, Ronald Willis saw [Clark] and [Hatch] hitchhiking, thought he recognized them and pulled over. Upon pulling nearer, [Willis] realized he did not recognize or know [Clark] and [Hatch], but agreed to give them a ride.
[Willis] then gave [Clark] and [Hatch] a ride to Jacksonville. During this ride, [Clark] told [Hatch] that he was going to take [Willis’s] truck. The two men asked to be let off. [Willis] pulled his truck over to let them out. [Clark] pulled out a pistol and shot [Willis] seven to eight times in the head....
[Clark] then stole [Willis’s] truck, dumped [Willis’s body off of Byrd Road and took off, along with [Hatch], in [Wil-ks’s] truck.
[Clark] decided later that night that [Willis’s] body would have to be moved someplace where it would not be found soon or ever. He decided that [Willis’s] body should be dumped in a river.
[Clark] and [Hatch] went back to Byrd Road and put [Willis’s] body in the pickup truck. They took the victim’s body to [Clark’s] father’s house where [Clark] got two cinder blocks and some rope. [Clark], accompanied by [Hatch], then took [Willis’s] body to the Nassau Sound River, where he tied the cinder blocks to the victim’s body. [Clark] then dumped [Willis’s] body into the Nassau Sound River. The victim’s body *893 has never been recovered and probably never will be recovered.
At trial, Clark himself testified that Hatch was the shooter and that he was merely an accomplice to the crimes. He also testified that Willis was a friend of his father and that he had no reason to shoot Willis. However, Thompson’s description of the crime is not consistent with Clark’s own version. Clark did not mention a drug deal or money. Further, Thompson’s testimony that Hatch said they dumped the body immediately after shooting Willis is not consistent with the evidence presented at trial. Finally, Thompson is serving multiple sentences and would probably not serve as a credible witness at a new trial. Accordingly, the postconviction court properly denied Clark’s claim of newly discovered evidence.
CONCLUSION
Having reviewed all of Clark’s claims and finding them either to be barred or meritless, we affirm the postconviction court’s order.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. The trial judge found: (1) Clark was previously convicted of another capital felony, (2) the murder was committed during the commission of a robbery, and (3) the murder was committed for pecuniary gain. The trial judge considered and rejected the following mitigating factors: (1) prior criminal history, (2) extreme mental or emotional disturbance, (3) the victim was a participant in the conduct or consented to the act, (4) Clark was a minor participant, (5) Clark was under extreme duress or under substantial domination, (6) diminished capacity, and (7) Clark’s age at the time of the murder.
. On direct appeal, Clark argued that the trial court erred in allowing him to waive mitigation, that the trial court erred by finding murder in the course of a felony and pecuniary gain as separate aggravators, that the trial court failed to consider the mitigating evidence available in the record properly, and that his death sentence was disproportionate.
. The issues raised in Clark’s first amended motion were: Clark could not prepare an adequate 3.850 motion until he received public records — summarily denied; Clark was being denied right to effective assistance of counsel because the Office of Capital Collateral Representative (CCR) lacked adequate funding — summarily denied; the rule prohibiting the interviewing of jurors was unconstitutional — summarily denied; State actions denied Clark effective legal representation— summarily denied; Clark was innocent of first-degree murder and was denied adversarial testing — insufficiently pleaded; the State withheld evidence or presented misleading evidence or both — evidentiary hearing granted; Clark's counsel was ineffective at the sentencing phase (mitigation claim)— summarily denied; ineffective assistance of counsel at the guilt phase — evidentiary hearing granted; ineffective assistance of counsel during voir dire — evidentiary hearing granted; ineffective assistance of counsel for failing to obtain a competent mental health expert — summarily denied; newly discovered evidence showed that Clark’s conviction and sentence were unreliable (Clark did not specify what evidence was newly discovered) — insufficiently pleaded for failure to state facts to support relief sought and without merit; Clark was denied a reliable competency hearing — procedurally barred; Clark was incompetent to stand trial — procedurally barred; no adequate inquiry was made into whether Clark's waiver of mitigation was voluntary and intelligent — summarily denied; Clark’s sentence was unreliable because it rests upon Hatch's perjured testimony — evidentiary hearing granted; sentencing instructions to the jury unconstitutionally diluted its sense of responsibility — summarily denied; jury instructions were unconstitutionally burden shifting — procedurally barred; Clark’s sentence relied on an unconstitutional automatic ag-gravator — procedurally barred; jury instructions on the prior capital felony aggravator were constitutionally inadequate — procedurally barred; jury instructions on the pecuniary gain aggravator were constitutionally inadequate — procedurally barred; Florida’s capital-sentencing statute was unconstitutional — summarily denied; Clark was incompetent to waive any constitutional rights — procedurally barred; inflammatory and improper prosecutorial argument — insufficiently pleaded; jury misconduct — summarily denied; it was error to allow the jury to hear testimony about Clark's prior felonies — summarily denied; Clark was incompetent during pen-dency of the appeal and the record is incomplete — summarily denied; Clark's trial was materially unreliable — insufficiently pleaded; Clark was innocent of murder and the death penalty — insufficiently pleaded; cumulative error — insufficiently pleaded.
In his second amended motion filed January 31, 2006, Clark raised twenty-one grounds for relief.
. It is unclear how or why the postconviction court granted an evidentiary hearing on this issue after Clark filed his second amended 3.851 motion. It appears that the court intended to grant the hearing on the same issues as it had granted a hearing on in the June 1996 Order.
. It appears the postconviction court confused Clark’s guilt phase and penalty phase ineffective assistance of counsel claims. Clark’s second claim in his second amended motion is that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate and present mitigation. This was claim 7 in his first amended motion which was denied in the June 1996 Order. Claim 8 of Clark's first amended motion was that counsel was deficient during the guilt phase of his trial. The State did not oppose an evidentiary hearing, claiming an "inability to know the extent of the preparation performed by [Clark's] trial counsel.” This claim was thus both summarily denied without an evidentiary hearing in 1996 and denied after an evidentiary hearing in 2007. We treat this claim as having been denied after an eviden-tiary hearing.
.
Spencer v. State,
. Michael Thompson, an inmate at Union Correctional Institution, testified that he met Clark in the Death Row library and that, while looking over Clark’s paperwork, he recognized the name John Hatch as an inmate with whom he had served time at another prison. Thompson testified that Hatch told him that he’d had to testify against Clark to save his own life and that he, Hatch, was the actual shooter.
. The motion was not addressed nor were the pleadings amended.
