While Petitioner-Appellant Ronnie Lee Gardner was being escorted from prison to the state district court in Salt Lake City in 1985 for a hearing on a charge of second degree murder, an accomplice handed him a gun. At point-blank range, Mr. Gardner shot Michael Burdell, an attorney standing inside the court’s archives room. Mr. Bur-dell died, and Mr. Gardner was convicted of first degree capital murder and sentenced to death.
I. BACKGROUND
Our recitation of the facts and lengthy case history is based largely on United State Magistrate Judge Samuel Alba’s thorough Report and Recommendation, which was adopted with only slight modifications by the Utah District Court in
Gardner v. Galetka,
No. 2:95-CV-846-TC,
A. The Crime
On April 2, 1985, guards transported Mr. Gardner from the maximum security unit of the Utah State Prison to the Metropolitan Hall of Justice in Salt Lake City to appear at a hearing on a second degree murder charge. As he entered the basement lobby of the courthouse, a female accomplice handed him a gun. Mr. Gardner pointed the gun at his guards, who quickly retreated to the parking lot. During this encounter, he exchanged gunfire with one of the guards and was shot, apparently in the chest.
Looking for a way out of the building, a wounded Mr. Gardner entered the archives room. A court clerk, a prison officer, and three attorneys were inside. Mr. Gardner said he had been shot, then walked back out of the archives room. When Mr. Gardner went back into the lobby, two of the attorneys, Michael Bur-dell and Robert Macri, attempted to hide behind the open door to the archives room. Mr. Gardner reentered the archives room with his gun held in front of him. He saw the two attorneys hiding behind the door and stopped in front of them. Standing about one-and-a-half to two feet in front of Mr. Macri, Mr. Gardner tightened his grip on the gun and pointed it at him. Mr. Burdell said, “Oh, my God.” Mr. Gardner *867 said, “Oh Fu — ” and then moved the gun away from Mr. Macri to Mr. Burdell. Mr. Maori fled out into the lobby and Mr. Gardner fatally shot Mr. Burdell in the head after what one witness described as a “definite pause.” Vol. XLVII, State Ct. Tr. 942. Mr. Gardner then fired at Mr. Burdell a second time.
Mr. Gardner forced the prison officer in the archives room to accompany him out to a stairwell leading to the second floor. While Mr. Gardner crossed the lobby, a uniformed bailiff, Nick Kirk, came down the stairs to investigate the commotion. Mr. Gardner shot and seriously wounded Mr. Kirk and then proceeded up the stairs. On the next floor, Mr. Gardner forced a vending machine serviceman to accompany him outside of the building. As soon as Mr. Gardner was outside, the serviceman broke free and dived through a teller’s window inside the building. In the parking lot and surrounded by police, Mr. Gardner threw down his gun and surrendered.
B. Trial Proceedings and Direct Appeal
In 1985, Mr. Gardner was tried before a jury in the Third Judicial District Court in Salt Lake County, Utah. The jury convicted Mr. Gardner of first degree murder, attempted first degree murder, aggravated kidnaping, escape, and possession of a dangerous weapon by an incarcerated person. Only the first of these convictions is now at issue. The sole theory of the defense as to this charge was that he lacked the intent to kill Mr. Burdell — that the killing was either an accident, or at most, done with reckless disregard to human life.
On direct appeal, Mr. Gardner made the following claims of error: (1) the district court judge abused his discretion in denying him a change of venue, (2) the judge should have recused himself, (3) the death penalty laws in Utah are unconstitutional, (4) the use of his prior felony as an aggravating circumstance violated his due process rights, (5) he was improperly denied a challenge for cause, (6) excessive security in the courtroom denied his right to a fair trial, (7) the judge violated his Sixth Amendment right to confrontation when he cut off his recross-examination of a witness, (8) corrections officer Wayne Jorgensen testified about statements taken in violation of
Miranda
and
Massiah,
(9) the district court gave an erroneous jury instruction on manslaughter, (10) the district court gave an erroneous oral instruction to the jury regarding the order it should consider the various offenses, (11) the district court improperly denied his motion for directed verdict, (12) the district court erred in admitting evidence of a previous homicide he had committed as an aggravating factor, (13) his sentence was disproportionate compared to those given in similar cases, (14) the government engaged in prosecutorial misconduct, and (15) his counsel was ineffective in failing to object to the testimony of Officer Jorgensen, Dr. Heinbecker, and Mr. Fuchs. The Utah Supreme Court denied relief on all claims,
Gardner I,
C. State Post-Conviction Proceedings
Mr. Gardner then sought post-conviction relief in state court. The Utah district court addressed all of his claims on the merits, and ruled that Mr. Gardner had been denied effective assistance of counsel both during the penalty phase and on appeal.
Gardner v.
Holden,
The Utah Supreme Court reversed the district court’s holding that Mr. Gardner received ineffective assistance of counsel, and affirmed its rejection of Mr. Gardner’s other claims.
Gardner II,
(1) error by the trial court in admitting hypnotically enhanced testimony; (2) error by the trial court in not advising Gardner of his right to remain silent and not testify; (3) violation of Gardner’s right to be present at all the hearings in his case; (4) consideration by the jury of impermissible information about the victim; (5) failure to instruct the jury on all the statutory mitigating circumstances in the penalty phase; and (6) failure to instruct the jury in the penalty phase that the existence of aggravating factors had to be found beyond a reasonable doubt before they could be considered in deciding to impose the death penalty.
Id. at 614.
The court summarily rejected four of Mr. Gardner’s claims of ineffective assistance during the guilt phase. First, the court held that Mr. Gardner’s claim that counsel were ineffective because he was coerced to testify was addressed, in essence, on direct appeal when the court rejected Mr. Gardner’s assertion that admitting his prior inconsistent statements violated his rights under
Miranda v. Arizona,
The Utah Supreme Court addressed Mr. Gardner’s remaining claims on the merits. The court reversed the district court’s holding as to ineffective assistance of trial counsel at the penalty phase, holding that Mr. Gardner was not prejudiced by counsel’s failure to give Dr. Heinbecker, a defense psychologist, enough time to prepare before the penalty phase. Id. at 619. While the district court ruled that trial counsel had a conflict of interest but that Mr. Gardner waived his right to raise any such conflict, the Utah Supreme Court held that he was not denied effective assistance on account of any conflicts of interest with his trial attorneys. Id. at 620-621. The Utah Supreme Court also reversed the district court’s holding that appellate counsel had failed to research and investigate the trial record for appealable issues, concluding that “habeas counsel ... apprised [the court] of no issues that should have been raised on the first appeal.” Id. at 620. The court held that it did not condone appellate counsel’s preparation techniques, but no prejudice resulted therefrom. Id. The court affirmed the district court’s holding that Mr. Gardner’s appellate counsel lacked any conflicts of *869 interest in representing him. The court also rejected Mr. Gardner’s claim that the trial court’s failure to appoint expert witnesses and an investigator at-the state’s expense violated his right to effective assistance of counsel, due process, meaningful access to the courts, and equal protection. Id. at 622-23.
Again, the United States Supreme Court denied review.
D. Federal Habeas Proceedings
In 1997, Mr. Gardner filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the District of Utah. Two years after filing his habeas petition, Mr. Gardner sought to amend his petition to raise a new ineffective assistance claim based on appellate counsel’s failure to object to the jury instruction that defined the meaning of the term “knowingly.” As discussed below, this instruction was incorrect because it addressed elements of the definition in the disjunctive rather than the conjunctive. This claim had not been raised in state court on direct appeal or during the state post-conviction proceedings. The district court allowed Mr. Gardner to amend his petition, but held the added claim in abeyance until he had exhausted state avenues for relief on the claim. Accordingly, Mr. Gardner filed a second petition for post-conviction relief in state court.
While the jury instruction claim proceeded in state court, in 2003 the magistrate judge issued a report and recommendation addressing and rejecting Mr. Gardner’s other habeas claims. The district court adopted the recommendation with slight modifications. The court rejected all of Mr. Gardner’s ineffective assistance claims on various grounds. The court did not address the deficiency prong of Mr. Gardner’s ineffective assistance claims based on his counsel’s failure to object to Officer Jorgensen’s testimony and failure to fully prepare and present mental health evidence at the guilt phase, instead holding there was no prejudice. The court held that Mr. Gardner failed to establish that his trial counsel had a conflict of interest. Moreover, it was not unreasonable for counsel to have Mr. Gardner testify at the guilt phase, nor was it unreasonable for counsel to rely on Mr. Barton’s examination of the gun. Finally, the court rejected as unsupported Mr. Gardner’s claims of ineffective assistance for stipulating to his prior convictions and failing to request a bifurcated proceeding.
As to his counsel’s performance at the penalty phase, the court held that they acted deficiently in failing to prepare and present mental health evidence, but that no prejudice resulted. The court also rejected Mr. Gardner’s ineffective appellate counsel claim, finding that there was no conflict of interest and that none of the issues they failed to raise were meritorious.
The court then addressed Mr. Gardner’s remaining claims. The court held that Mr. Gardner failed to establish prejudice resulting from the judge’s denial of his motion to change venue, the admission of Mr. Maori’s post-hypnosis testimony, or the decision not to bifurcate the trial. The court also rejected Mr. Gardner’s claims concerning judicial recusal, excessive security, prosecutorial misconduct, limitation of cross-examination, notification of the right not to testify, a lesser included offense instruction, exclusion of mitigating evidence during the penalty phase, a jury instruction about mitigating circumstances and aggravation proof, the alleged presumption of death, and the alleged failure *870 to narrow the class of people eligible for the death penalty.
Back in state court, the Utah district court held that Mr. Gardner’s belated claim of appellate ineffectiveness based on the faulty jury instruction was procedurally barred. The Utah Supreme Court affirmed.
Gardner v. Galetka,
II. DISCUSSION
Since Congress’s 1996 revision of the standards applicable to federal habeas review of state court convictions, the Anti-terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), the role of the federal courts has become that of a back-stop or safety net to ensure that state courts applied the constitutional standards in effect at the time (as enunciated by the Supreme Court) and did so reasonably. Habeas review is no longer an occasion for refinement or modification of constitutional principles or for federal court second-guessing of state court application of constitutional law, so long as the state court addressed the merits of any properly presented federal constitutional claim, applied correct standards, and reached a decision that is within the zone of reasonableness. Under this statutory framework, a state prisoner seeking federal habeas review is entitled to relief only if he can demonstrate that the state adjudication on the merits “(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States; or (2) resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) and (2). Unless otherwise stated below, we review Mr. Gardner’s claims under this standard of review. Our review of decisions by the federal district court on questions of law is de novo; our review of factual findings, if any, is for clear error.
United States v. Sims,
A. Ineffective Assistance at Guilt Phase
Mr. Gardner’s sole defense at the guilt phase was that he lacked the intent to kill Mr. Burdell. He argued that the killing was either an accident, or at most, done with reckless disregard to human life. He now contends that his counsel was unconstitutionally deficient in four areas in making this argument at trial.
1. Failure to Adequately Investigate Mr. Gardner’s Mental Health
Prior to the guilt phase of the trial, defense counsel engaged a psychologist, Dr. Rindflesh, to examine Mr. Gardner. The examination took an hour and a half. See Mag. Rep. 63. Dr. Rindflesh’s subsequent report indicated that there were no signs of a major psychological disorder now or in the past, suggesting further investigation would be fruitless. Id. at 73. But see id. at 74 (noting that Dr. Rindflesh wrote in his report, “Perhaps an interview in a more open setting will be possible in the future,” suggesting that another examination might have been preferable). Mr. Gardner argues that trial counsel failed to undertake a sufficient investigation of his *871 mental health issues to support his lack of intent defense.
In his state post-conviction petition, Mr. Gardner argued that his counsel failed to adequately investigate and present evidence that he had been shot in the chest rather than in the shoulder, and to present evidence of the wound’s potential effect on his mental state.
Gardner II,
Even if Mr. Gardner had properly raised this issue in district court, we would conclude that his counsel was not constitutionally deficient. After all, a psychologist did evaluate Mr. Gardner, albeit for a short time, and his report indicated that he suffered from no major psychiatric disorder. Mag. Rep. 73;
see Bell v. Thompson,
Moreover, even if defense counsel were deficient in not having a more elaborate evaluation conducted, no prejudice resulted from his failure to investigate further. A psychologist who later examined Mr. Gardner, Dr. Heinbecker, testified that
*872
Mr. Gardner’s psychological state might lead him to act on “automatic pilot” during stressful situations. Mag. Rep. 69. Such testimony might support an irresistible impulse defense, but Utah does not recognize such a defense.
See State v. Herrera,
2. Failure to Present Ballistics Evidence
Mr. Gardner claimed in the state court post-conviction proceedings that his counsel was ineffective for failing to offer evidence that would have cast doubt on whether he had intended to kill Mr. Bur-dell. His theory was that at the time he pulled the trigger on Mr. Burdell, he was in shock as a result of having been shot by one of the courthouse guards. Trial counsel was ineffective, he argued, because counsel implied to the jury that Mr. Gardner had been shot in the shoulder, when in fact he suffered much more serious wounds to his chest and lungs. Mr. Gardener contended that an accurate account of his injuries would have better shown the jury the shock that he was experiencing, and that this would have a bearing on his
mens rea.
The Utah Supreme Court rejected this claim as frivolous.
Gardner II,
In his federal habeas petition and on appeal, Mr. Gardner similarly argued that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to offer evidence that would have cast doubt on whether he had intended to kill Mr. Burdell, but the basis for that argument has shifted from misdescription of his wound to counsel’s failure to undertake a thorough investigation of the murder weapon. He claims that counsel failed to engage a forensic laboratory to investigate the inner workings of the gun. A subsequent investigation, in 1999, found that the gun had a faulty safety device. Mr. Gardner contends that if counsel had properly investigated the weapon at the time, he could have used this evidence to support an inference that the gun went off accidentally, or upon such slight finger pressure that the firing was not intentional.
Contrary to Mr. Gardner’s argument, this claim is not substantially the same as the one he raised in state court, but is based on an entirely different factual predicate. The failure to investigate the murder weapon is not the same as the failure to present evidence to the jury regarding the nature of his wounds. Because this claim could have been raised in state court and was not, Mr. Gardner is now proeedurally barred from raising it at this late stage.
See Magar v. Parker,
Even if we were to hold that this claim was not proeedurally barred, Mr. Gardner would still not be entitled to relief. First, defense counsel did not act deficiently. In addition to reviewing the examination of the weapon conducted by the Utah State Crime Laboratory, Mr. Gardner’s lawyers had the gun examined by Edward Barton, a defense investigator with ballistics expertise. He concluded that it took two pounds of pressure to pull the trigger, and reported that this was average for a single action handgun. The gun would “not be classified as having a hair trigger.” He also stated that the hammer had three stop positions, all in good working order. Mr. Gardner does *873 not explain why his counsel acted deficiently in relying on Mr. Barton’s investigation. Nothing in Mr. Barton’s report suggested that counsel should have had the gun analyzed further.
Moreover, no prejudice resulted from any alleged deficiencies. At trial, the state’s expert testified that the gun had to be cocked before it could be fired. The post-trial examination of the gun did not indicate it was faulty in any material way. A ballistics expert testifying in the 1999 federal hearing confirmed that the gun did not have a hair trigger. He indicated that he could not get the gun to fire accidentally through “drop tests.” Collectively, this evidence strongly suggests that the gun did not go off accidentally, but rather was intentionally cocked and fired twice at Mr. Burdell. While the 1999 expert testified that the gun had a malfunctioning safety device that could have caused the gun to fire if Mr. Gardner had pulled the trigger and released it before the hammer actually fell, Mr. Gardner has put forth no evidence to show that he tried to release the trigger after pulling it. In other words, even if defense counsel had consulted another investigator before trial, the elicited information would not have materially assisted Mr. Gardner’s defense.
3. Failure to Object to Officer Jorgensen’s Testimony
Mr. Gardner also contends that trial counsel was ineffective during the guilt phase by failing to object to testimony by Officer Wayne Jorgensen, presented on rebuttal, regarding incriminating statements Mr. Gardner made to him while in the hospital. According to Officer Jorgensen, he guarded Mr. Gardner while he was in the hospital on two occasions. On the first night, Mr. Gardner initiated a conversation with him and volunteered information about Mr. Burdell’s murder. He kept talking until Officer Jorgensen cut him off. On the second occasion, Mr. Gardner again initiated conversation with Officer Jorgensen and they “got talking” about Mr. Bur-dell’s murder. Officer Jorgensen asked if Mr. Gardner would have shot him [i.e., Officer Jorgensen], to which Mr. Gardner responded, “Hell, man, I had to get away, I didn’t care who it was,” and “Hey, I had to do what I had to do.” When Officer Jorgensen asked Mr. Gardner why he shot Mr. Burdell, Mr. Gardner said it was because he thought Mr. Burdell was going to “jump on [him] and stop [him].” Officer Jorgensen filed no incident reports about these statements, and Mr. Gardner later denied ever making them.
Mr. Gardner claims that his counsel should have moved to suppress Mr. Jorgensen’s testimony about Mr. Gardner’s alleged statements because they were involuntary under
Mincey v. Arizona,
The Utah Supreme Court correctly found that there was ample evidence, wholly apart from Officer Jorgensen’s testimony, that Mr. Gardner’s killing of Mr. Burdell was intentional. Mr. Gardner himself admitted asking for a loaded gun because an unloaded gun was useless; a witness testified that he saw him pause before shooting Mr. Burdell; another wit *874 ness testified that Mr. Gardner had pointed the gun at him but then turned the gun and shot Mr. Burdell instead; and Mr. Gardner fired at Mr. Burdell twice, which required him to both cock the gun and pull the trigger twice. This overwhelming evidence of guilt would have come in and would have necessitated a finding of intent, even if Officer Jorgensen’s statements had been suppressed. Thus, no prejudice resulted.
Even if we were to find that the court acted unreasonably in finding that no prejudice resulted for the alleged deficiencies, defense counsel did not act deficiently in any of the four ways Mr. Gardner suggests. As we discuss below, the statements did not violate
Miranda
or
Massiah,
counsel could not prove the statements were given involuntarily, the statements were reliable, and counsel acted reasonably in calling Mr. Gardner to the stand. In reaching those conclusions, we bear in mind that a reviewing court must be “highly deferential” to counsel’s decisions.
Strickland v. Washington,
466
U.S.
668, 689,
a. Miranda and Massiah Violations
Mr. Gardner claims his counsel acted deficiently in failing to object to Officer Jorgensen’s statements on Miranda or Massiah grounds. Those cases stand for the proposition that the Fifth and Sixth Amendments afford individuals the right to counsel before and after indictment while being questioned by government officials. It is evident that admission of Officer Jorgensen’s testimony, on rebuttal, did not violate those principles.
First, it is not clear that Officer Jorgensen initiated the conversations with Mr. Gardner. The officer testified that the two men “got talking,” and Mr. Gardner, who is the only other person present at the time, does not testify that Officer Jorgensen initiated the conversation. Instead, Mr. Gardner claims that the conversations did not take place at all. If Mr. Gardner volunteered the information to Officer Jorgensen without any action on the part of the state, there would be no constitutional violation in introducing it into evidence.
See Miranda v. Arizona,
Quite apart from whether the state initiated the conversations, however, introduction of the testimony could not have violated
Miranda
and
Massiah
because these decisions apply only to the introduction of evidence as part of the prosecution’s case in chief and do not prevent statements that are otherwise inadmissible from being admitted to contradict a witness’ testimony on rebuttal.
Harris v. New York,
Even assuming the statements were admissible on rebuttal, Mr. Gardner argues that his counsel had a duty to request an instruction limiting the use of the testimony to the issue of credibility. On direct appeal, the Utah Supreme Court rejected this argument, stating that the failure to request the instruction was not “manifest error.”
Gardner I,
Accordingly, Mr. Gardner’s counsel did not act deficiently in failing to object to Officer Jorgensen’s testimony on Fifth and Sixth Amendment grounds.
b. Voluntariness
Mr. Gardner next claims his statements were inadmissible because he was under medication at the time and the statements were therefore not given voluntarily. The Utah Supreme Court did not address this claim, but after conducting an evidentiary hearing the federal district court concluded that it was reasonable for trial counsel not to have raised this objection. At the 1999 federal hearing, a psychiatrist testified that Mr. Gardner was on Halcion, a short term treatment for insomnia, on the night he supposedly made the statements. Mag. Rep. 44. The psychiatrist testified that the drug could cause amnesia, but that there was only a remote chance it caused Mr. Gardner to forget making the statement. If the statement had been made while under the influence of Halcion, he would not have been fully awake or conscious of what he was doing, and the combination of Halcion and anti-anxiety medication could have loosened up Mr. Gardner’s inhibitions. Another psychiatrist testified that the dose of Halcion administered to Mr. Gardner was very unlikely to have caused amnesia.
We conclude that counsel acted reasonably in concluding the statements to Officer Jorgensen were voluntary. A statement is inadmissible if it is not “the product of a rational intellect and free will.”
Mincey,
*876 There is a significant factual component to that conclusion, which is not plainly erroneous and must therefore guide this court’s analysis of the issue. In light of the facts as found by the district court, and bearing in mind the presumption that counsel’s performance was not constitutionally defective, we agree with that court that counsel acted reasonably in not raising the voluntariness objection to Officer Jorgensen’s testimony.
c. Unreliability
Mr. Gardner argues that, at the very least, Officer Jorgensen’s testimony about his alleged statements was so unreliable that his counsel should have objected under Utah Rule of Evidence 403. Under Rule 403, evidence can be excluded if “its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury.” This particular objection was not raised in state court, but was raised in his federal habeas petition. There is no apparent reason why Mr. Gardner could not have raised his Rule 403 argument in state court, so Mr. Gardner is procedurally barred from raising the issue now.
Magar,
Even if we were to address this issue, however, we would agree with the decision of the magistrate judge and the district court to reject the argument. As the magistrate judge noted, “Rule 403 is not to be used to exclude testimony that a trial judge does not find credible because credibility questions are the prerogative of a jury.” Mag. Rep. 50. We defer to the factfinder’s credibility determinations, as it is in the best position to evaluate such matters.
United States v. Barron-Cabrera,
4. Counsel’s Decision to Encourage Mr. Gardner to Testify
Finally, Mr. Gardner contends that trial counsel was ineffective because he encouraged Mr. Gardner to take the stand, which proved injurious to his defense. In the state post-conviction proceedings, Mr. Gardner argued that his counsel was ineffective for coercing him to testify. The court dismissed the claim, holding that the issue had been addressed, in essence, on direct appeal when the court rejected Mr. Gardner’s assertion that admitting his pri- or inconsistent statements violated his rights under
Miranda v. Arizona,
The theory of the defense was that Mr. Gardner had planned only to escape, not to kill anyone; once he was shot, he did not know what was going on, and while in a dazed state, saw movement in the archives room and his gun discharged unintentionally. Mr. Gardner argues that his counsel acted unreasonably in calling him to testify because his testimony did not support this theory and that calling him opened the door for Officer Jorgensen’s testimony on rebuttal. He also claims that his counsel knew he would say that he could not remember the immediate circumstances surrounding Mr. Burdell’s death and that he would refuse to name his accomplice.
After full examination of the record, we agree with the district court that defense counsel did not act unreasonably in calling Mr. Gardner to the stand. Apart from Mr. Gardner’s own testimony, the defense *877 had little evidence to support its theory. As already discussed, there was little evidence to support a major psychological disorder that could have prevented Mr. Gardner from having the requisite intent, and there was also little evidence suggesting that the gun went off accidentally. Thus, even if Mr. Gardner’s own testimony contained a few damaging statements, a reasonable attorney could easily conclude that it was, on balance, the best hope of providing evidence that could support a verdict of acquittal.
5. Cumulative Effect
Though none of these alleged errors itself warrants reversal, we are required to look at the cumulative effect of counsel’s errors.
Duckett v. Mullin,
B. Ineffective Assistance at Penalty Phase
Mr. Gardner argues that his counsel acted deficiently in failing to adequately investigate and present evidence of Mr. Gardner’s social and mental history during the penalty phase. The state district court during post-conviction proceedings addressed a version of this argument, holding that Mr. Gardner was denied effective assistance when his counsel failed to give the defense psychiatrist, Dr. Heinbecker, more time to prepare for the penalty phase. The Utah Supreme Court reversed, holding that Mr. Gardner was not prejudiced by his counsel’s failure to give the psychiatrist more time to prepare.
Gardner II,
1. Standard of Review
Typically we would address the prejudice issue under deferential AEDPA standards because the issue was addressed on the merits by the Utah Supreme Court. Oddly, however, in oral argument the state asserted, against its interest, that the issue should be reviewed de novo. Aple. Br. 3.
*878
The state reached this conclusion by applying Utah Code Annotated §§ 78B-9-109 and -202(2), as well as our decision in
Wilson v. Sirmons,
The state relies on our reasoning in
Wilson
and the rule laid out above in conceding that AEDPA deference does not apply. We stated in
Wilson
that “when a state court’s disposition of a mixed question of law and fact, including a claim of ineffective assistance, is based on an incomplete factual record, through no fault of the defendant, and the complete factual record has since been developed and is before this Court, we apply de novo review to our evaluation of the underlying claim.”
There is a key difference, however, between Wilson and this case. In Wilson, the prisoner had a federal right to an evidentiary hearing, which was denied by the state court despite his diligence in pursuing the right. 1 Here, however, any right Mr. Gardner may have had to funding to develop a factual record is a product of state law, not federal law. Federal habeas review is confined to denials of federal rights, see 28 U.S.C. § 2254(a), and it is therefore irrelevant at this stage whether or not Mr. Gardner was denied the rights to which he may have been entitled under state law. Our decision in Wilson therefore does not have the implications for our standard of review in this case that the state seems to think.
The state’s candid (if unwarranted) concession raises a related issue: can the eongressionally mandated deferential standard of review be waived by counsel? In other words, should this court apply a standard of review more searching than that dictated by AEDPA on account of the fact that the state’s appellate lawyers mistakenly believed that the more searching standard applies?
It is well established that states may waive some of AEDPA’s provisions.
See,
*879
e.g., Boston v. Weber,
We agree with our sibling circuits that the correct standard of review under AEDPA is not waivable. It is, unlike exhaustion, an unavoidable legal question we must ask, and answer, in every case.
See Eze,
2. Ineffectiveness at Penalty Phase
To determine the appropriateness of the death penalty, “evidence about the defendant’s background and character is relevant because of the belief, long held by this society, that defendants who commit criminal acts that are attributable to disadvantaged background, or to emotional and mental problems, may be less culpable than defendants who have no such excuse.”
California v. Brown,
Prior to trial, defense counsel arranged for a psychiatrist, Dr. Rindflesh, to meet with Mr. Gardner and prepare a report of his mental health. During trial, counsel contacted several other psychologists, none of whom were willing to meet with Mr. Gardner. Before the penalty phase, defense counsel enlisted the help of Dr. Heinbecker, who was contacted only after the guilty verdict was rendered, just two days before the penalty phase began. Dr. Heinbecker did not review Mr. Gardner’s juvenile and institutional records until the day before he testified at the penalty phase. Defense counsel said that Dr. Heinbecker spent most of the day reviewing documents and then met with counsel in the evening. Dr. Heinbecker, who had testified in three other capital cases, stated, I “had never been in a case like this where I wasn’t given adequate records ... or adequate time to review the records.” Aplt. Br. 27.
It is undisputed that Mr. Gardner’s childhood was troubled in many respects. According to his submission on appeal, if the full, accurate picture of Mr. Gardner’s background had been presented at the penalty phase, the jury would not have sentenced him to death. He argues that this evidence would have shown, inter alia, the following: he grew up in a dysfunctional family, the product of a broken home; he lived in a condemned house for some time, then lived with various foster families and was in and out of detention facilities; his step-father exposed him to criminal activity; the children in his family were sexually and emotionally abused; he was hospitalized for meningitis as a child, which could have caused organic brain damage; he had been sniffing gasoline since he was six years old, which could have caused brain damage; he was introduced to LSD by age ten; also by age ten he had been charged with public intoxication, shoplifting, petty larceny, grand larceny, gas sniffing, and violence against fellow students and his sister; at age eleven he spent one year in a locked facility at Utah State Hospital where he was introduced to pot and acid; psychological tests at the State Hospital revealed evidence of possible brain impairment; he scored a forty-seven on the Halstead Reitan Battery of tests, indicating moderate brain damage with possible implications on judgment; he was placed in a state industrial school at age fourteen; he has a tic, which could suggest brain illness; and, he has a history of “being immature, acting on impulse without any internal controls.” Aplt. Br. 30.
The Utah Supreme Court, overturning the conclusion of the state district court, held that counsel’s failure to give Dr. Heinbecker more time to prepare for trial was insufficiently prejudicial to warrant habeas relief. Petitioner has not suggested that the Utah court failed to apply the proper constitutional standard. Applying AEDPA deference, we hold that the Utah Supreme Court’s conclusion was not 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).
Notwithstanding the abbreviated period he was given to prepare, Dr. Heinbecker did testify to most of the above-summarized background information. He testified that Mr. Gardner had an unstable upbringing, the product of a broken home. His mother had difficulty disciplining her nine kids, his step-father was incarcerated, his family had lengthy criminal and substance abuse histories, and his mother was *881 charged with parental neglect when Mr. Gardner was two and five. Dr. Heinbecker further testified that Mr. Gardner was in and out of state institutions for most of his life, and tests revealed some evidence of organic brain damage.
The information Dr. Heinbecker could have discovered and presented if given more time would likely only have added color to what Dr. Heinbecker actually did testify to at the penalty phase. Knowing of his difficult upbringing and possible brain damage did not convince a jury to forego the death penalty. It is not likely that further detail about Mr. Gardner’s youthful drug use, criminal history, and scores on various mental tests would have changed the outcome. Additional evidence along these lines could even have a double-edged effect, to the extent that it could increase the jury’s perception of Mr. Gardner’s dangerousness. The greater the dysfunction in his family, the less likely it is that Mr. Gardner’s violence would subside if ever released.
Moreover, specific evidence designed to show that Mr. Gardner was not fully in control of his actions could have opened the door to extensive and damaging rebuttal evidence. The jury had not been informed of a number of violent acts Mr. Gardner committed in the past, which appeared to be calculated and controlled. Had the defense presented evidence to show that Mr. Burdell’s killing was a product of Mr. Gardner’s upbringing, the prosecution probably could have introduced this damaging evidence in rebuttal. The prosecution also could have introduced expert testimony that Mr. Gardner’s antisocial personality disorder would not impair his volition. Indeed, Mr. Gardner’s own 1999 experts testified that he performs well under stress and always manages to stop when his life is threatened. In addition, the prosecution could have introduced Mr. Gardner’s own statement that one of the motivating factors behind his attempted escape was his desire to return to drug use. Finally, the prosecution could have admitted evidence that his anti-social personality disorder was brought on in large part by his own actions, including extensive drug use.
Reasonable minds may differ on the likely impact on the jury of more thoroughly researched mental health testimony, as the differing assessments of the state judges demonstrates. The question before us, however, is not whether the Utah Supreme Court was correct but whether its judgment was unreasonable. Based on our review of the arguments and record evidence, it was not.
Mr. Gardner tries to compare this case to
Wiggins v. Smith,
This case, however, differs from Wiggins in two key respects. First, in Wiggins there was no apparent risk of opening the door to damaging evidence by introducing the potential mitigating circumstances of Mr. Wiggins’ difficult childhood. Here, as outlined above, the prosecution could have presented extensive damaging evidence in rebuttal. Thus, it is much more likely in this case than in Wiggins that defense counsel made a reasonable, strategic decision in not introducing more specific evidence about Mr. Gardner’s past.
Second, during the sentencing phase of
Wiggins,
defense counsel “introduced
no
evidence of Wiggins’ life history.”
Id.
at 515,
In his Reply Brief, Mr. Gardner also relies on the lead opinion in
Wilson v. Sirmons,
First, according to the expert in Wilson, the difference between his testimony at trial and what he could have said if he had more time for preparation was “enormous! ].” Id. at 1077. Prior to his testimony, the expert administered tests that suggested a diagnosis of schizophrenia, but the tests were not valid and had to be readministered. The expert therefore could testify only to diagnoses of bipolar disorder, anxiety disorder, and post-traumatic stress disorder. Id. at 1075. After trial, on retesting and examination of additional information from other sources, the expert concluded that the defendant suffered from schizophrenia, paranoid type, and that it was possible that he was delusional at the time of the crime. Id. at 1077. The difference between Dr. Heinbecker’s trial testimony and what he could have given after further investigation, by contrast, was purely a matter of degree. To be sure, Dr. Heinbecker could have provided more detailed testimony, but it would not have supported a different diagnosis.
Second, according to the lead opinion in Wilson, the evidence that could have been presented was far more likely to influence the jury than that in this case. According to the lead opinion, schizophrenia is likely to be regarded as more mitigating than generalized personality disorders because *883 the latter are inseparable from personal identity and often untreatable. Id. at 1094 (“Diagnoses of specific mental illnesses such as schizophrenia or bipolar, which are associated with abnormalities of the brain and can be treated with appropriate medication, are likely to be regarded by a jury as more mitigating than generalized personality disorders, which are diagnosed on the basis of reported behavior, are generally inseparable from personal identity, and are often untreatable through medical or neurological means.”). Here, by contrast, even after full investigation the defense expert uncovered no diagnoses that were this potent a form of mitigation. Mr. Gardner did not suffer from hallucinations or delusions. There was only evidence of moderate brain damage, most of which was caused by his own drug use, and Dr. Heinbecker testified with regard to these impairments.
Third, in Wilson counsel did not even provide his expert witness an opportunity to testify regarding the diagnoses he had reached, or to explain the significance of those diagnoses to the jury, leading to a disastrous cross-examination in which the defendant was successfully portrayed as a “psychopath,” without effective response from the defense. Id. at 1076. Nothing of that sort occurred here. Despite the limitations under which he was operating, Dr. Heinbecker did an effective job of conveying mitigating evidence regarding Mr. Gardner’s family history, possible organic brain damage, and social circumstances.
Finally, in Wilson our standard of review was de novo, and the state provided only a skeletal argument regarding the issue of prejudice. Id. at 1079, 1093-95. Here, the Utah Supreme Court decided the prejudice issue on the merits, and the state has fully briefed the prejudice issue.
Thus, in contrast to the result in Wilson, we conclude that the Utah Supreme Court’s decision that Mr. Gardner was not prejudiced by his counsel’s failure to provide Dr. Heinbecker with more time to prepare was not unreasonable.
C. Ineffective Assistance on Appeal
We turn now to Mr. Gardner’s claim of ineffective assistance by appellate counsel, which is based on counsel’s failure to challenge on appeal a faulty jury instruction defining the mens rea element for first degree murder. The court gave the following instruction:
A person engages in conduct: (1) “Intentionally” when it is his conscious objective or desire to engage in the conduct or to cause the result; or (2) “Knowingly” when he is aware of the nature of his conduct, or the existing circumstances, or is aware that his conduct is reasonably certain to cause the result.
Aplt. Br. 37 (emphasis added). Defense counsel did not object to the proposed instruction, but offered their own alternative instruction that was rejected.
Gardner v. Galetka,
Because this issue was not raised in state court on direct appeal or on application for post-conviction relief, the district court held the claim in abeyance while Mr. Gardner exhausted the claim in state
*884
courts. The Utah Supreme Court held that the claim was procedurally barred because it was not raised on direct appeal.
Gardner v. Galetka,
The federal district court disagreed. The court reasoned that a threshold finding of frivolousness is “interwoven with federal law.”
Gardner,
We do not agree.with the district court that the Utah Supreme Court’s dismissal of the appellate ineffectiveness claim cannot be regarded as a procedural bar to federal habeas review. To be sure, the Utah court’s frivolousness determination itself involves the merits of his jury instruction claim.
See Backstrom Family Ltd. P’ship v. Hall,
“A misstatement of an element in jury instructions is subject to harmless error analysis on habeas review.”
Scoggin v. Kaiser,
When returning the verdict, the jury foreman stated that the jury unanimously found Mr. Gardner had killed Mr. Burdell “for the purpose of effecting [his] escape ... from lawful custody.” Vol. XLIX, 2598. Thus, the jury must have concluded that Mr. Gardner intentionally shot Mr. Burdell, knowing that it would allow him to escape. Mr. Gardner does not dispute this conclusion. He argues, however, that in light of the instruction, it is not clear whether the jury found that he was “aware that his conduct [was] reasonably certain to cause the result,” that is, Mr. Burdell’s death. In other words, given the disjunctive formulation of the instruction, the jury could have found that Mr. Gardner fired the bullet at Mr. Burdell for the purpose of effectuating an escape, but without intending or even knowing that the result would be Mr. Burdell’s death.
Even if there was such an ambiguity, we agree with the district court that no reasonable juror “would find, given the totality of the evidence, that Mr. Gardner was aware of his conduct but was not reasonably certain that firing a loaded .22 caliber handgun directly into Mr. Burdell’s head at point-blank range would result in Mr. Burdell’s death.”
Gardner,
D. Conflict of Interest Claim
Mr. Gardner next alleges that his representation suffered from a conflict of interest that deprived him of a fair trial. At trial, Mr. Gardner was represented by two brothers, Andrew and James Valdez. On the day of the courthouse shooting, each brother arrived separately at the scene. Having heard that Mr. Gardner had killed an unnamed attorney, each was fearful that the other might have been the victim. When each of them encountered Mr. Gardner, he inquired after the whereabouts of his brother.
Before the district court, Mr. Gardner asserted the existence of a conflict of interest on the basis of a variety of factual allegations, see Mag. Rep. 21. On appeal, however, he argues only that the conflict of interest stemmed from “the victimization of the Valdez brothers.” Aplt. Br. 78. Mr. Gardner alleges that this “victimization” occurred because of the Valdez brothers’ fear for each other’s safety after the courthouse shooting, as well as the fact that the Valdezes were familiar with some witnesses to and victims of the event.
3
See
*886
id.
The Utah Supreme Court rejected these arguments on the merits, in large part because Mr. Gardner could not demonstrate the existence of any deleterious impact on his representation.
See Gardner II,
The right to counsel guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment includes the right to representation that is free from conflicts of interest.
United States v. Bowie,
Mr. Gardner primarily points to Andrew Valdez’s closing statement at his trial as evidence of the alleged conflict of interest. During his closing statement, Mr. Valdez described his personal fear on the day of the shooting, when he was anxious for his brother’s whereabouts and safety. See Vol. L 2880 (Trial Tr. 1661) (“I got this fear because I hadn’t seen my brother ... and I was so fearful at that point. And I went looking for [James] in the crowd. I didn’t know it, but he had done the same thing. He had gotten there and had asked, ‘Where is Andy?’ He thought I had been killed. We found each other and rejoiced in each other’s safety, and the fear subsided.”) Mr. Gardner argues that this suggests that trial counsel was unable to zealously advocate for him. But this ignores the thrust of Mr. Valdez’s argument, by which he was attempting to convince the jury to set aside its fear when sentencing Mr. Gardner, just as he had set aside his fear and determined to continue representing Mr. Gardner because he “believe[d] in saving his life.” Id. at 2881 (Trial Tr. 1662). In other words, Mr. Valdez was arguing to the jury that just as he himself had been able to put aside his fear, the jury should and must do so in order to make a rational sentencing judgment. See id. at 2880-81 (Trial Tr. 1661-62) (“[I]f, in fact, you fall for the fear tactic, I would submit to you that that is not a rational basis to kill this man.”).
In context, Mr. Valdez’s argument does not support the claim that his ability to represent Mr. Gardner was adversely affected by the impact of the courthouse shooting. If anything, it indicates that Mr. Valdez was attempting to use his experience to convince the jury to sentence Mr. Gardner to life imprisonment, rather than death. Because Mr. Gardner has failed to demonstrate any adverse effect from his attorneys’ representation, he cannot prevail on his conflict of interest claim.
Mr. Gardner separately argues that the trial court erred by failing to hold an evidentiary hearing on this potential conflict of interest when the issue arose. Even assuming the trial court knew or reasonably should have known about the existence of a conflict, however, Mr. Gardner still would have to show that the conflict of interest “adversely affected his counsel’s performance” in order to obtain habeas relief.
Mickens v. Taylor,
E. Change of Venue
Before trial, Mr. Gardner moved for a change of venue, arguing that the pretrial publicity about his attempted escape and the shooting made it impossible for him to receive a fair trial in Salt Lake City. In support of his motion, Mr. Gardner submitted several dozen newspaper articles and videotapes of local broadcasts typifying the publicity. Mr. Gardner also relied on a survey, commissioned by his counsel, of approximately four hundred registered voters in Salt Lake City, concerning their knowledge of and reaction to the crime.
See
Aple. Br. 87-88. The survey purported to show that ninety percent of respondents thought that the defendant was either “guilty” or “probably guilty.”
Gardner I,
The trial court denied Mr. Gardner’s initial motion for a change of venue based on pretrial publicity, but left open the opportunity to renew the motion. Aple. Br. 89. The trial judge then conducted five days of voir dire, during which he asked the prospective jurors about their ability to remain impartial, asked them to explain any outside information that they had learned about the case, and allowed both prosecution and defense to conduct further examination. Id. After the jury was selected, Mr. Gardner renewed his motion for a change of venue and it was again denied.
Mr. Gardner raised the venue issue on direct appeal to the Utah Supreme Court, which affirmed the trial court.
Gardner I,
This court’s precedents are not entirely consistent with regard to the standard of review to apply to a state court’s decision regarding jury impartiality.
Compare Goss v. Nelson,
The Sixth Amendment, applied to the states by the Fourteenth Amendment, ensures that “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a ... trial[ ] by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed.” U.S. Const. amend. VI. Due process may require a change of venue stemming from the “presumed prejudice” following from pretrial publicity in two related contexts. First, where pretrial publicity is so pervasive and prejudicial that a court could not expect to find an unbiased jury pool in the community, it should “presume prejudice,” necessitating a venue change.
Goss,
We consider first Mr. Gardner’s claim that the pretrial publicity alone raised a presumption of prejudice. This is rarely the case.
See United States v. Abello-Silva,
The Supreme Court has presumed prejudice from pretrial publicity alone only in exceptional settings — where the trial became “a hollow formality” or when the courthouse proceedings were overrun by the press “to accommodate the public appetite for carnival.”
Murphy,
Although the courthouse shooting generated significant pretrial publicity, Mr. Gardner points to nothing that suggests his trial devolved into a “circus.” Both the pretrial publicity and the survey conducted by the defense illustrated only that it was widely known that Mr. Gardner was involved in the courthouse shooting' — -a fact already conceded by the defense.
See Gardner I,
As we have previously explained, “[P]re-trial publicity in topical criminal cases is inevitable.”
Abello-Silva,
Mr. Gardner also fails to demonstrate that jury selection manifested such prejudice as to deprive him of a fair trial. A change of venue is warranted when “the jurors demonstrated actual partiality or hostility that [could] not be laid aside.”
Jeffries v. Blodgett,
Evidence of community sentiment at jury selection has been used to invalidate a conviction in the rare situation when voir dire indicates that the pretrial publicity had such a pervasive effect that a fair jury could not be seated. In
Irvin v. Dowd,
In recent years, the Supreme Court has made clear, however, that community prejudice should be inferred from voir dire only in exceptional cases. Thus, in
Patton v. Yount,
In this case, although roughly fifty-five percent of jurors professed that they had formed an opinion about Mr. Gardner’s guilt, Aplt. Br. 83, only four of twelve actually seated jurors indicated that they had formed an opinion to guilt — even fewer than in
Patton.
Of equal importance is the conscientiousness with which the trial judge worked to seat an impartial jury. “Voir dire examination serves the dual purposes of enabling the court to select an impartial jury and assisting counsel in exercising peremptory challenges.”
Mu’Min v. Virginia,
The inference of actual prejudice here is no stronger than in other cases where we have rejected such claims.
See, e.g., Hale,
F. Security Measures and Shackling
Mr. Gardner also argues that the security measures taken during his trial — including the presence of four security officers wearing bulletproof vests, electronic screening devices at the courtroom entrance, escorts for the jurors to get to their cars after dark, and, most importantly, visible shackles — violated his Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial by labeling him in the jurors’ eyes as particularly dangerous. To determine whether the presence of security measures in the courtroom violates the Sixth Amendment, we normally ask “whether what [the jurors] saw was so inherently prejudicial as to pose an unacceptable threat to defendant’s right to a fair trial; if the challenged practice is not found inherently prejudicial and if the defendant fails to show actual prejudice, the inquiry is over.”
Holbrook v. Flynn,
In Hack, we held that the trial court had not abused its discretion when it shackled two defendants who were on trial for attempting to forcibly hijack a prison transport plane and effect their escape. Id. at 867-68. Mr. Gardner posed a nearly identical situation. He not only had a history of violence, but was on trial for a murder committed while attempting to escape from a courthouse. The judge was justified in taking precautions to prevent another attempt. Mr. Gardner nonetheless attempts to distinguish Hack by noting that the judge in that case had “weighed all relevant factors, based on the uncontroverted information available to him in considering the most appropriate precautionary measures” and his reasons were “sufficiently documented.” Id. at 868. Here, in contrast, the only record of the trial court considering what security measures would be appropriate arose when, mid-trial, Mr. Gardner objected to the presence of security guards within the courtroom and the court took steps to limit their visibility. We do not take the lack of detailed findings to mean that the court had abdicated its duty to weigh the need for precautions against the costs to Mr. Gardner, though, or to mean that the court was unjustified in allowing these extreme security measures. More likely it is the result of Mr. Gardner’s not objecting to the security until the trial was well underway, and even then to object to only one particular measure, which the court immediately addressed. As Mr. Gardner had a history of violent escape attempts, the court had compelling reasons that justified these security precautions, and Mr. Gardner’s Sixth Amendment rights had to yield to the competing interest of ensuring the safety of the trial participants.
G. Hypnotically Refreshed Testimony
Unbeknownst to both Mr. Gardner and the prosecution, Mr. Macri, one of the witnesses to the shooting in the archive room, underwent hypnosis between testifying at the preliminary hearing and testifying at trial. Mr. Gardner argues that Mr. Maori’s post-hypnotic testimony violated his rights under both the Due Process and Confrontation Clauses. We have rejected the per se constitutional invalidity of hypnotically-refreshed testimony,
Robison v. Maynard,
The Utah Supreme Court did not address whether the hypnosis amounted to a constitutional error, but instead found that Mr. Gardner was not prejudiced by any error that might have occurred, as Mr. Macri’s testimony “went only to a collateral issue that was, at most, marginally related to Gardner’s defense.”
Gardner II,
H. Witness Tampering
Mr. Gardner claims that the other eyewitness to the shooting, Kenneth Seamons, was “manipulated” by the prosecutor into altering his testimony during trial. An examination of what actually happened, however, belies any inference of prosecutorial indiscretion. At trial, Mr. Seamons testified that Mr. Gardner had pointed the gun at Mr. Burdell, and that “[t]he gun went off.” The trial then recessed for lunch. At lunch, the prosecutor told Mr. Seamons that he was “being too polite” in saying that the gun went off, and that “either [Gardner] did or he didn’t” pull the trigger. He did not instruct Mr. Seamons to lie or even to change his testimony, but only instructed him to tell how it happened. After lunch, Mr. Seamons then clarified that “Gardner shot Burdell” — testimony that was not inconsistent with his earlier testimony. Showing a witness how his phrasing could be misinterpreted and then instructing that witness to “tell how it happened” is not witness tampering, but being a good lawyer.
I. Bifurcation
Utah law provides that aggravated murder can be a capital felony. One way in which a murder can be aggravated is if “the actor was previously convicted of’ certain crimes. Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-202(1)(j). Mr. Gardner argues that the failure to have a bifurcated trial for his aggravating circumstances — two prior robbery convictions — prejudiced him. He cites
State v. James,
Mr. Gardner says that the failure to bifurcate violated his “fundamental rights and constitutional guarantee of not having his death sentence imposed in an arbitrary and capricious manner.” Aplt. Br. 104. Mr. Gardner cites no direct authority tying the right established in James (decided after Mr. Gardner’s trial) to a federal right.
*893
In the state supreme court, concurrences by Justices Stewart and Zimmerman asserted that, in allowing the evidence of Mr. Gardner’s two prior robberies, the trial court erred.
Gardner I,
Both of these reasons echoed ones given by the majority.
Gardner I,
We find these three reasons persuasive and conclude that the failure to bifurcate the trial did not unfairly prejudice Mr. Gardner.
J. Failure to Instruct on All Statutory Mitigating Factors
Mr. Gardner makes the strained argument that the jury should have been instructed that he may have “acted under extreme duress.” Utah Code Ann. § 76-3-208(2)(c) (1990). Mr. Gardner says the jurors could have concluded that Mr. Gardner “was in a state of physical duress,” Aplt. Br. 107, as a result of his gunshot wound and his general panic. This is not a convincing argument.
First, the statutory factor would seem to apply only to cases where a person is acting under the duress placed on him or her by another, not when any abstract “force” (such as pain or disorientation) is working on the person. Mr. Gardner cites the unpublished case,
Horton v. Massie,
Second, the instruction to the jurors allowed them to consider “any other fact in mitigation of the penalty.” Utah Code Ann. § 76-3-207(2)(g). They certainly could have considered Mr. Gardner’s extreme physical duress, especially if this was a central theme of his defense, as he alleges. Aplt. Br. 107. The court also instructed the jury that the mitigating factors it listed were merely examples and not exclusive. Aple. Br. at 119 (quoting R. 613-17). This is all that was required of it.
See Bryson v. Ward,
K. Presumption of Death
The judge instructed the jury in this case that: “When in the course of your deliberations you either reach a unanimous *894 verdict of death, or you become reasonably satisfied that such a unanimous verdict will not be rendered, you will notify the bailiff that you are ready to report to the Court.” Vol. LIX, Additional Instructions, 6. The instruction also said:
Your verdicts must be either:
We the jury impaneled in the above case having heretofore found the defendant guilty of Criminal Homicide, Murder in the First Degree, Count I of the Information, unanimously render a verdict of death; or
We the jury impaneled in the above case, Count I of the Information find that our deliberations have been concluded and we are reasonably satisfied that we will not reach a unanimous verdict of death.
The foreman will sign the appropriate verdict, and not the other, and bring both verdict forms back into the Court.
Id.
at 7. Mr. Gardner claims that the jury instructions could reasonably have been read as requiring unanimity for the jury to decide not to impose the death penalty, and that this amounts to a constitutional violation. Aplt. Br. 110 (citing
McKoy v. North Carolina,
The magistrate judge found that there was nothing in the jury instructions indicating that “the jury must unanimously find mitigating circumstances to exist.” Mag. Rep. 227. Moreover, the jury instructions above are clear that unanimity is only required for the death penalty to be imposed; if the jury is not unanimous on that point, then they will reach the alternative verdict (a life sentence). Indeed, as the magistrate judge explained, “[t]he only time the instructions provide that the jury must be unanimous is in their explanation of how the jury could impose a sentence of death.” Mag. Rep. 227-28. The district court adopted the reasoning of the magistrate judge, and we agree that no reasonable juror could have construed the instructions to require the jury to be unanimous in order not to impose a sentence of death.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the decision of the district court.
Notes
. Specifically, the prisoner had a right to an evidentiary hearing if he could show that his "allegations, if true and not contravened by the existing factual record, would entitle him to habeas relief.”
Wilson,
. Wilson is currently under en banc review, but not with regard to the issue of prejudice.
See Wilson v. Sirmons,
. The government argues that this claim was not raised before the district court and therefore is waived. There is some evidence, however, that the substance of this claim was raised before the district court. See, e.g., Vol. XIV, Doc. 607 at 5 (elaborating on idea that *886 “the Valdez brothers themselves were victims of the crime”). Because we conclude that this claim fails on the merits, we need not resolve whether it was waived.
. Because we conclude that Mr. Gardner is unable to demonstrate the existence of a conflict of interest sufficient to warrant habeas relief, we need not evaluate whether the district court was correct to conclude that he waived any conflict that might have existed. Nevertheless, we note that a client may generally waive his right to conflict-free representation, when done voluntarily, knowingly, and intelligently.
See Estelle v. Smith,
