Charles Kenneth Foster was sentenced to death after he confessed during the guilt/innocence phase of his first-degree murder trial. This is an appeal from the district court’s denial of his second and successive petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Like its predecessor, Foster’s second petition seeks relief based upon the performance of his attorney, Virgil Mayo. Foster again argues thаt judge and jury did not have the opportunity to review crucial evidence. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Foster met Julian Lanier at a bar on the evening of July 14, 1975. The two men persuaded two prostitutes to travel in Lanier’s motorhome to a remote wooded area. Both men grew increasingly intoxicated. In the early morning hours of July 15, as Lanier and one of the women were about to engage in sexual intercourse, Foster attaсked him and slit his throat with a knife. Aided by the women, Foster dragged Lanier into the woods and covered him with leaves and branches. Lanier, however, was still breathing. With one slice, Foster severed his spinal cord. Foster and the two women then divided the money in Lanier’s wallet.
The trial began on October 1, 1975. Foster’s case rested entirely on his own testimony. Foster was planning to suggest that one of the women committed the homicide. In the middle of this testimony, however, Foster broke down and made a dramatic witness stand confession consistent with his earlier confession to the police. Following this confession, the jury convicted Foster of murder in the first degree and robbery. The sentencing phase commenced immediately thereafter.
During the penalty phase, Mayo pursued a strategy Foster had earlier rejected: to defend on the bаsis of Foster’s mental and emotional state at the time of the crime. The mitigating evidence Mayo presented to the jury consisted entirely of the testimony of two witnesses and documents pertaining to Foster’s two involuntary commitment proceedings.
First, Foster’s ex-wife described the “abnormalities in [Foster’s] behavior:”
Well, he cut himself all the time and he has cut all the arteries in his arms and he has cut the heel strain in two and hе has burnt steel wool in his leg. Just all kinds of things. The only reasons he doesn’t kill hisself [sic] is because he thinks that that is the one crime that he cannot be forgiven for.
Mrs. Foster concluded with an impassioned plea not to kill her ex-husband because he was “a very sick person.”
Dr. John Mason, a psychiatrist who had treated Foster, testified next. The doctor’s testimony was limited to his assessment of the possible effect of alcohоl on Foster’s capacity for premeditation:
Certainly, I would feel that from past experience Mr. Foster has very poor control when intoxicated and certainly intoxication would effect [sic] his ability to maintain a thought or to maintain a plan or carry it through. But as to estimateexactly how long he would be able to do so I don’t think I could really do that.
Dr. Mason also identified the documents from the involuntary commitment proceedings and read his diagnosis on each occasion: “paranoid reaction” on November 25, 1970, and “suicidal depression with overdose of medication and self mutilative [sic] behavior” on February 21, 1974.
At the conclusion of the sentencing hearing, the judge, but not the jury, considered reports from Dr. Mason and two other court-appointed psychiatrists.
II. INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL
In his first petition for federal habeas corpus, Foster claimed that the jury did not have the oрportunity to learn the full impact of his mental illness. Foster specifically argued that his attorney failed to extract important clinical information from his expert witness, Dr. Mason. See Foster v. Strickland,
The present petition is Foster’s second before the federal courts. The magistrate found and the district court specifically agreed, however, that Foster’s petition was not an abuse of the writ. See Rule 9(b), 28 U.S.C. foil. § 2254. This finding is not challenged on appeal, and we shall not address the issue.
In the present petition Foster repeats his attack on counsel’s decision to forego a detailed presentation of medical evidence and to rely instead upon Mrs. Foster’s emotional plea. Although we accord such strategic decisions а heavy measure of deference, the Supreme Court has suggested an exception:
[Strategic choices made after thorough investigation of law and facts relevant to plausible options are virtually unchallengeable; and strategic choices made after less than complete investigation are reasonable precisely to the extent that reasonable professional judgments support the limitations on investigation. In other words, counsel has a duty to make reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations unnecessary.
Strickland v. Washington,
For purposes of this appeal, Foster argues that we should not defer to Mayo’s strategic judgment because the attorney breached his duty to investigate the defendant’s history of mental illness. Aсcordingly, our threshold inquiry is whether Virgil Mayo conducted a reasonable investigation into Foster’s psychiatric difficulties.
Mayo assumed responsibility for Foster’s case approximately a month before trial. He interviewed Foster on at least ten separate occasions and discussed Foster’s history of mental illness during a number of these interviews. Mayo spoke to Foster’s mother and ex-wife. In addition, Mayo intеrviewed various members of the community who were familiar with Foster. After he learned of Foster’s mental disturbance, Mayo reviewed the court records of the two involuntary commitments. Mayo then discussed Foster’s condition with a judge who had handled the proceedings and a psychiatrist who treated Foster.
Foster criticizes Mayo for not pursuing two additional sources of evidence. First, Mayo did not review Foster’s medical records. Second, except for a brief conversation with Dr. Mason immediately preceding his testimony, Mayo did not talk to the three court-appointed psychiatrists.
When assessing a decision not to investigate, we must make “every effort ... to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the circumstanсes of counsel’s challenged conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from counsel’s perspective at the time.” Strickland v. Washington,
In addition the three court-appointed psychiatrists had unanimously agreed that Foster was sane at .the time of the homicide. Two of these doctors, Dr. Mason and Dr. Sapoznikoff, had been the psychiatrists most intimately involved in Foster’s treatment.
Foster nevertheless argues that, even if there was to be no insanity defense, counsel should havе searched for additional evidence that would have supported mitigation of the death penalty.
After careful review of the record, we conclude that counsel formulated his trial strategy only after frequent consultations with his client and an informed evaluation of all his options. See Mulligan v. Kemp,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Mayo promptly moved for a continuance and additional psychiatric examinations. This motion was denied.
. The only evidence adduced by the state in the sentencing trial consisted of additional photographs of the victim’s wounds.
. The documents themselves, which were admitted into evidence, contained somewhat more detail. For example, thе paperwork resulting from the 1970 commitment shows that Foster was deemed to be "incompetent by reason of paranoid reaction; ... that his incompetency is acute.... [and] chronic ... [and] that his propensities are delusional thinking_" The documents resulting from the 1974 commitment describe "drug abuse” and “hostile, combative behavior."
. The three psychiatrists had examined Foster at the court's request.
. The procеdural history of this case through the resolution of Foster’s first petition for federal habeas corpus is set forth in Foster v. Strickland,
. Foster noted numerous deficiencies in his counsel's performance throughout the trial. See Foster v. Strickland,
. The Supreme Court has articulated a two-prong test for determining whether a litigant has been denied effective assistance of counsel. Strickland v. Washington,
. Mayo was familiar with this psychiatrist, Dr. Dunlan Wilensky, beсause Mayo had used Wil-ensky’s testimony to obtain a “mercy verdict” for another client.
. Of course, "[the adversarial] testing process generally will not function properly unless defense counsel has done some investigation into the prosecution's case and into various defense strategies.” Kimmelman v. Morrison,
. Foster propounds a very different test based upon "a comparison between the mitigating evidence defense counsel presented with the mental mitigating evidence he did not present due to his failure to investigate.” From Foster’s point of view, this test has much to recommend itself.
Unfortunately, Foster’s approach is erroneous because it adopts "the omniscient perspective” of hindsight, rather than counsel's perspective at the time of the challenged actions. See Mulligan v. Kemp,
. See also McCleskey v. Kemp,
. Character evidence poses similar difficulties. When confronted with an analogous situation, courts generally defer to the strategic judgment of counsel. See, e.g., Darden v. Wainwright,
. Counsel gave the following testimony before the lower court:
Although, in Kenny’s case, I was afraid of some very damaging, or aspects with a lay jury and as, as you know, the actual insanity defense as such is not very popular with the jurors especially as I found in this area and in the State of Florida from thе statistics I see, but it was a back door sort of insanity defense in which I was hoping to use that phrase of the charging and judging of events and the depraved mind in the case. It really prosecuted for second degree murder myself, [sic].
In fact, Mayo truncated Dr. Mason’s testimony at trial because he saw that the jury "wasn’t buying.”
. Foster points this out in his brief. It was Dr. Mason and Dr. Sapoznikoff who supplied most of the medical information in the commitment papers.
. Cf. Mulligan v. Kemp,
. We assume arguendo that his duty remained unaltered. In fact, there are circumstances in this case that may have operated to narrow this duty. Throughout his relationship with Mayo, Foster took an extremely unrealistic view of his options and proved an inordinately uncooperative client. Foster instructed his attorney not to raise the issue of insanity during the guilt/innocence phase, although it is not clear whether these instructions also included the sentencing proceedings. Specifically, Foster told his lawyer he desired a "walk or burn” defense.
On one hand, it is clear that a defendant's instructions may limit the scope of counsel’s duty to investigate a particular defense or strаtegy. See Tafero v. Wainwright,
Uncounseled jailhouse bravado should not deprive a defendant of his right to counsel’s better-informed advice. Thompson v. Wainwright,
We do not need to determine the boundaries of counsel’s duty in the present case because we hold that counsel’s investigation would have been adequate even had there been no limiting сircumstances.
. On direct, Mrs. Foster told of her ex-husband’s irrationality, self-mutilation, and suicidal urges. On cross-examination, she made the following plea:
He is a very sick person and I have begged for help for him and so has his mother and we could not get any help from nobody. They would rather put him in the electric chair and kill him than send him to an institution where he can get help. He has been to the mental health unit on a whole lot of occasions and they let him out and they give him pills to calm his nerves and the judge won’t do anything. He promised that he would. I have talked to Dr. Mason and he promised he would and I talked to Dr. Cluxton and he promised he would. And everybody at the Bay County Sheriffs Department knows me and any time I have ever had any occasion to talk to any of them, asking them to do something for him and nobody will. And they still won’t because it’s much easier to just go ahead and electrocute him and get it over with so they don’t have to worry about somebody whose mind is bad. If he had T.B. or anything they would put in an institution and they would help him where he couldn’t hurt anybody but just because his mind is bad people don’t understand that. They think it’s all right just to go ahead and get him out society. But why don’t they get him out of society before a crime like this had to be committed.
Foster v. Strickland,
. The present case should be compared to those decisions where we concluded that counsel’s performance was deficient because of a failure to investigate. See, e.g., Kimmelman v. Morrison,
. See also Songer v. Wainwright,
