Colin Gonzales pleaded guilty in New Mexico state court to committing second-degree murder, aggravated burglary, aggravated battery, and aggravated assault when he was fourteen years old. In determining an appropriate sentence, the state trial court applied N.M. Stat. Ann. § 32A-2-20 (1978, as amended through 1996), which allowed a juvenile who has committed certain serious crimes to be sentenced as an adult if “(1) the child is not amenable to treatment or rehabilitation as a child in available facilities” and (2) “the child is not eligible for commitment to an institution for the developmentally disordered or mentally disabled.” The court found that Mr. Gonzales was amenable to neither treatment nor rehabilitation and was not eligible for the statutory commitment. It subsequently sentenced him to a total of twenty-two years’ incarceration in an adult prison.
After the New Mexico Court of Appeals affirmed his convictions and sentences,
see State v. Gonzales,
For the reasons set forth below, we agree with the district court’s decision. Although
Apprendi
holds that “[ojther than the fact of a prior conviction, any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury, and proved beyond a reasonable doubt,”
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Most of the relevant facts are not disputed. We begin by describing the offenses committed by Mr. Gonzales, his mental health history, and the New Mexico juvenile justice system. We then summarize the state and federal proceedings below.
A. The murder and the accompanying crimes
On March 13, 1997, Mr. Gonzales and another youth broke into the Trujillo, New Mexico home of Arsenio Lucero and his wife while they were away. The two juveniles shot the Luceros’ dog with a rifle that they had stolen from another house. While Mr. Gonzales and his accomplice were still there, Mr. Lucero and his wife returned home. After Mr. Lucero entered the house, Mr. Gonzales shot him in the chest. The accomplice then shot him in the head “to put him out of his misery,”
When Mrs. Lucero entered the house, she saw her husband’s body and begged the two youths not to kill her. One of them told her to give them money and the keys to the family’s truck or they would kill her too. Mrs. Lucero responded that she had neither money nor the keys. Mr. Gonzales and his accomplice then searched Mr. Lucero’s body and found the keys, and Mrs. Lucero fled. The youths fired eighteen to twenty-two shots toward Mrs. Lucero and several neighbors, injuring one of them. The two then drove away in the Luceros’ truck, and New Mexico state police arrested them the next day.
B. Mr. Gonzales’s Mental Health History
Mr. Gonzales’s mental health history soon became a central issue in the court proceedings. His family had a history of mental illness, including attention deficit disorder, bipolar illness, and depression. From a very early age, by some accounts as young as two, Mr. Gonzales had taken medication for impulsivity, distractibility, and learning difficulties. His parents reported that he had fallen and hit his head twice as a young infant.
In elementary school, Mr. Gonzales had difficulty with math and spelling, as well as with tasks involving motor coordination and dexterity. However, he learned to read and had no difficulties in doing so. According to his mother, when the medication was properly adjusted, Mr. Gonzales made A’s and B’s, but his grades would drop when he either did not take medication or developed a tolerance for the dosage.
When Mr. Gonzales reached adolescence, he began abusing drugs — drinking alcohol, “huffing paint[,]” smoking marijuana, and experimenting with cocaine and LSD. See State Ct. Rec. vol. I, at 59 (Forensic Evaluation Rpt. by Susan Cave, Ph.D.). He also exhibited many other behavioral problems: fighting, running away, vandalizing, and stealing. During sixth *1103 grade, school officials placed Mr. Gonzales in special education classes for “difficulties related to attention and behavioral control.” Fed. Dist. Ct. Rec. vol. Ill, doc. 65, at 29 (Proposed Findings and Recommended Disposition, filed Nov. 8, 2005) (citation omitted).
In July 1996, a treating physician diagnosed Mr. Gonzales with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder and referred him to the Las Vegas Medical Center for psychiatric treatment. A psychiatrist there added diagnoses of dysthymia, a non-specific learning disorder, and a writing disorder. Within a few months, one of Mr. Gonzales’s therapists, Ms. Sande Harley-Grano, became concerned that Mr. Gonzales’s behavior was becoming increasingly dangerous to himself and his family. In an October 1996 letter, written to justify a residential placement for Mr. Gonzales, Ms. Harley-Grano discussed his substance abuse and his self-destructive behavior (stabbing himself with pencils and being highly provocative with dangerous peers). Ms. Harley-Grano also reported that, in March 1996, Mr. Gonzales had ransacked a house and stolen several items of property, including a gun, and that, in August of that year, he had been arrested by the police for breaking into a neighbor’s home.
Despite this assessment, Mr. Gonzales’s family declined the recommended residential placement. However, in January 1997, the family followed the recommendation of a juvenile probation officer and placed Mr. Gonzales in another psychiatric facility. Unfortunately, Mr. Gonzales stayed at that facility for only thirteen days. At his mother’s request, but against medical advice, he was discharged on February 2, 1997 with a diagnosis of “inhalant abuse, marijuana abuse, major depression, rule out Bipolar Disorder, ADHD, and history of head injury.” State Ct. Rec. vol., I, at 59. (Forensic Evaluation Rpt. by Susan Cave, Ph.D.). Less than six weeks later, Mr. Gonzales shot Mr. Lucero.
C. New Mexico’s Youthful Offender Disposition Statute
Under New Mexico law, the district court for each county includes a division known as “the Children’s Court.” N.M. Stat. Ann. § 82A-1-5 (1978, as amended through 1993). Each district must designate one or more of its judges to serve on that court. Unlike the majority of jurisdictions, which authorize juvenile courts to transfer certain cases to an adult court, New Mexico does not have a transfer system.
See Gonzales,
New Mexico law creates three classes of juvenile offenders: serious youthful offenders, youthful offenders, and delinquent offenders.
See
N.M. Stat. Ann. § 32A-2-3(C), (H), (I) (1978, as amended through 1996) (provisions in effect when Mr. Gonzales was prosecuted and sentenced). “These classifications reflect the rehabilitative purpose of the Delinquency Act [N.M. Stat. § 32A-2-1,
et seq.],
coupled with the realization that some juvenile offenders cannot be rehabilitated given the limited resources and jurisdiction of the juvenile justice system.”
Gonzales,
“Serious youthful offenders” are children fifteen years or older charged with *1104 committing first-degree murder. See N.M. Stat. Ann. § 32A-2-3(H) (1978, as amended through 1996). They are excluded from the jurisdiction of the children’s court unless found guilty of a lesser offense. •
“Youthful offenders” are children fourteen years or older who are adjudicated guilty of any one of twelve enumerated violent felonies or who have had three prior felony adjudications in the previous three years in addition to their current felony offense, as well as children fourteen years of age who are adjudicated guilty of first-degree murder.
See Gonzales,
Finally, there are juvenile offenders who do not fit into these first two categories. They include all children under the age of fourteen, and children over the age of fourteen years who have not committed certain offenses.
See Gonzales,
With regard to Mr. Gonzales’s class—youthful offenders — the Children’s Court may impose an adult sentence if the judge finds both that “(1) the child is not amenable to treatment or rehabilitation as a child in available facilities, and (b) the child is not eligible for commitment to an institution for the developmentally disabled or mentally disordered.” N.M. Stat. Ann. § 32A-2-20(B) (1978, as amended through 1996) (emphasis added) (provision in effect when Mr. Gonzales was prosecuted and sentenced). In making these findings, the court is required to consider the following factors:
(1) the seriousness of the alleged offense;
(2) whether the alleged offense was committed in an aggressive, violent, premeditated or willful manner;
(3) whether a firearm was used to commit the alleged offense;
(4) whether the alleged offense was against persons or against property, greater weight being given to offenses against persons, especially if personal injury resulted;
(5) the sophistication and maturity of the child as determined by consideration of the child’s home, environmental situation, emotional attitude and pattern of living;
(6) the record and previous history of the child;
(7) the prospects for adequate protection of the public and the likelihood of reasonable rehabilitation of the child by the use of procedures, services and facilities currently available; and
(8) any other relevant factor, provided that factor is stated on the record.
N.M. Stat. § 32A-2-20(C).
D. Initial state court proceedings
Mr. Gonzales was fourteen at the time of the murder and accompanying crimes. Three days after his arrest, the state filed a delinquency petition, charging him with eleven delinquent acts (including murder, aggravated burglary, armed robbery, and *1105 conspiracy). See Fed. Dist. Ct. Rec., vol. Ill, doe. 65, at 32 n. 32 (listing delinquent acts). The state also filed a notice of intent to request an adult sentence.
The day of the preliminary hearing, Mr. Gonzales’s counsel, a contract attorney with the state public defender, requested a confidential forensic evaluation by New Mexico’s Children, Youth, and Families Department because “[[Information exists that leads defense counsel to question [his] mental condition and competency to stand trial in that the child has a prolonged history of mental health treatment for a presently existing mental illness.” State Ct. Rec. vol. I, at 26-27. The court entered a stipulated order permitting the evaluation and suspending further proceedings until the competency issue was resolved.
In April 1997, the parties reported to the court that Mr. Gonzales was in need of assessment and treatment. As a result, the court entered an order transferring him to the Sequoyah Adolescent Treatment Center, where he remained for nineteen months. On August 1, 1997, Mr. Gonzales reported that, about a month after being admitted, an older boy forced him to engage in sexual acts.
In September 1997, Mr. Gonzales retained an attorney named Dan Cron, and the public defender’s office withdrew from the case. Mr. Cron began plea negotiations with the prosecutor. According to Mr. Cron’s affidavit, he discussed with Mr. Gonzales the legal rights waived by a plea, the elements of the charged offenses, and the possible juvenile and adult sentences. Mr. Gonzales would generally respond that he understood. However, based on subsequent conversations, Mr. Cron concluded that his client had actually understood little of what was discussed, and so he repeated the same explanations to him.
In July 1998, Mr. Cron and the prosecutor stipulated to an amended order directing Dr. Susan Cave, a psychologist, to perform a competency evaluation. Dr. Cave interviewed Mr. Gonzales, administered a series of psychological tests, and reviewed clinical records from the Sequo-yah Adolescent Treatment Unit. In an August 1998 report, Dr. Cave acknowledged that “[t]here is no adequate competency examination instrument for use with adolescents.” State Ct. Rec. vol. I, at 61. In her view, Mr. Gonzales was “still incredibly emotionally immature for a boy of 15 and very self-centered[,]” nevertheless “[he] indicated sufficient information to be competent to stand trial.” Id. at 62-63. Dr. Cave explained:
[Mr. Gonzales] can correctly identify where all the principals in a court room sit. He fully understands the function of the judge, [and he] even voluntarily explained the difference between a court trial and a jury trial. He understands that the job of the jury is to decide if you are “guilty” or “not guilty.” He understands that the purpose of his lawyer is to “get me out of this with the least amount of trouble as possible.” He understands that the District Attorney wants to put, him in prison. He understands that the witnesses “testify against you, say what they saw.” He can recite the somewhat lengthy list of charges against him. He can discuss the various levels of murder [,] and [he] comprehends them. He is able to work with his lawyer in a rational and factual manner in his own defense. He indicates that there are some things about the crime spree that week that he does not remember, but there are other things he says that “are carved into my memory.” He says that when he first came to treatment, he would sit in a room and dwell on what happened. He *1106 understands the difference between juvenile sanctions and adult sanctions.
Id. at 62.
In 1998, the trial court appointed another attorney, Gerald Baca, to assist with Mr. Gonzales’s defense. Mr. Baca continued the plea negotiations and recommended to his client that he not go to trial. In Mr. Baca’s view, the prosecution’s evidence was strong: several witnesses (Mrs. Lucero and her neighbors) had seen Mr. Gonzales leave the Luceros’ house and fire a rifle at them. Moreover, Mr. Cron’s investigation had ruled out the possibility that the accomplice was the only trigger man. Mr. Baca also concluded that, no matter who fired the shots, Mr. Gonzales could be convicted of the charged offenses as an accessory.
Mr. Baca concluded that Mr. Gonzales understood the legal proceedings. In Mr. Baca’s view, Mr. Gonzales “appeared -to be a fairly normal guy. Sure, he had troubles, he had problems he had to work on. But he was talking with me normally. He appeared to be comprehending our conversations.” Fed. Dist. Ct. Rec. vol. Ill, doc. 65, at 42 (quoting Baca deposition). Mr. Gonzales asked him “some fairly sophisticated questions about his defense.” Id.
On October 23, 1998, the state trial judge entered a stipulated order finding Mr. Gonzales competent to stand trial.
E. Mr. Gonzales’s guilty plea
On the same day, Mr. Gonzales and the government entered into a written agreement under which he would plead guilty to the following offenses: (1) second-degree murder (including a one-year firearm enhancement), in violation of N.M. Stat. §§ 30-2-1B and 31-18-16; (2) aggravated residential burglary, in violation of N.M. Stat. § 30-16-4; (3) aggravated battery with a firearm, in violation of N.M. Stat. §§ 30-3-5(0 and 31-18-16(A); and (4) two counts of aggravated assault, in violation of N.M. Stat. §§ 30-3-2(A) and 31-16-16(A). The parties further agreed that, upon the court’s acceptance of the plea, Mr. Gonzales would be adjudicated a youthful offender under New Mexico law. The court would then conduct an amenability hearing within a reasonable amount of time and “[a]ll sentencing/disposition [would] be left in the [c]ourt’s discretion.” State Ct. Rec. vol. I, at 75. The prosecutor, Mr. Baca, and Mr. Gonzales all signed the agreement.
As to each count, the agreement informed Mr. Gonzales of the maximum sentence that he could receive if he were sentenced as an adult (fifteen years for second-degree murder, nine years for aggravated residential burglary, three years for aggravated battery with a firearm, and eighteen months for each of the aggravated assault with a firearm charges, in addition to fines and mandatory periods of parole). The agreement further explained that if he were sentenced as a juvenile, Mr. Gonzales could receive sentences ranging from probation to a maximum of two years at the New Mexico Boy’s School or an extended commitment until he turned twenty-one. Finally, the agreement informed Mr. Gonzales of his state law right to a jury or bench trial; 1 his right to compel the attendance of witnesses, and his right to confront the witnesses against *1107 him. The agreement included a certification from Mr. Baca that he had conferred with Mr. Gonzales and had explained its contents in detail.
On October 23, 1998, the court also conducted a plea hearing. The judge asked Mr. Gonzales if he understood the charges, the possible sentences he could receive (as a juvenile or as an adult), his right to a jury or bench trial, the government’s burden to prove the charges beyond a reasonable doubt, his right to remain silent, and his right to an attorney. After Mr. Gonzales responded that he understood those rights, the judge asked him if he admitted committing the offenses listed in the plea agreement, and Mr. Gonzales responded affirmatively. He reported that no one had threatened him or promised him anything not set forth in the plea agreement and that he was sure that he wanted to plead guilty. The judge then accepted Mr. Gonzales’s plea.
F. Amenability and Commitment Findings
Following the entry of the guilty plea, the state court held an amenability hearing pursuant to N.M. Stat. § 32A-2-20. The prosecution argued that Mr. Gonzales should be sentenced as an adult. It presented testimony from Mr. Lucero’s family, police officers who were at the crime scene, officers involved in the investigation, and from Mr. Gonzales himself (through statements that he had made to police officers about the crimes). Additionally, the prosecution entered into the record a copy of a report prepared by Mr. Ray Garley, a probation officer with the Juvenile Justice Division of the New Mexico Children, Youth and Families Department. In that report, Mr. Garley recommended that the court find that Mr. Gonzales was neither amenable to treatment nor eligible for commitment.
In response, Mr. Gonzales argued that he should be sentenced as a juvenile. Mr. Gonzales focused on factors (5) (sophistication and maturity) and (7) (“the prospects for adequate protection of the public and the likelihood of reasonable rehabilitation of the child by the use of procedures, services and facilities currently available”). See id. § 32A-2-20(C)(5) & (7). He called four experts to testify regarding his mental health, developmental status, and prior and ongoing treatment. Although they differed with regard to a specific diagnoses, each of the experts concluded that Mr. Gonzales was amenable to treatment as a juvenile in certain facilities.
The trial court announced its ruling at a May 3, 1999 hearing. Although acknowledging that “this is a tough case ... and I’ve waivered back and forth some ... throughout,” Fed. Dist. Ct. Rec. vol. Ill doc. 65, at 77 (quoting May 3, 1999 Hr’g, tape 3), it disagreed with Mr. Gonzales’s experts. The court concluded that Mr. Gonzales was neither amenable to treatment as a juvenile in available facilities nor eligible for commitment in an institution for the developmentally disabled or the mentally disordered.
The court explained that the first five factors listed in § 32A-2-20(C) supported the government’s argument for an adult sentence: Mr. Gonzales had committed a serious offense against a person with a firearm and in an aggressive, violent, premeditated, or willful manner. See § 32A-2 — 20(C)(1) — (4). Although he was not “totally mature[,]” “[Mr. Gonzales was not] a baby either”; “[h]e knew what was going on[;][h]e knew what his problems were.” Fed. Dist. Ct. Rec. vol. Ill, doc. 65, at 75 (quoting May 3,1999 Hr’g, tape 3). Finally, the court explained, Mr Gonzales had a record of misconduct as a juvenile. As to that factor, the court referred specifically to Probation Officer Garley’s report.
*1108 At a subsequent hearing, the trial court imposed adult sentences totaling twenty-two years.
G. New Mexico Court of Appeals Decision on Direct Appeal
On direct appeal, Mr. Gonzales argued that New Mexico had violated his due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment by allowing a judge rather than a jury to make findings regarding amenability to treatment and eligibility for commitment that justified the imposition of an adult sentence. Mr. Gonzales contended that these amenability and eligibility findings constituted “fact[s] that increase[ ] the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum.”
Apprendi,
The Court of Appeals rejected both arguments. As to the
Apprendi
claim, the court reasoned that the findings addressed in the Supreme Court’s landmark case concerned the elements of a crime, a matter fundamentally different than findings regarding amenability to treatment and eligibility for treatment.
See
H. Federal Habeas Proceedings
In his federal habeas corpus petition, Mr. Gonzales raised the Apprendi and sufficiency of the evidence claims. He also asserted that his guilty plea was not knowing and voluntary and that he received ineffective assistance of counsel.
The federal district court noted that Mr. Gonzales had not exhausted the latter two claims, and it allowed him to do so. Accordingly, Mr. Gonzales filed post-conviction actions in New Mexico state court raising the guilty plea and ineffective assistance claims. The state court denied those claims in a summary ruling.
Following the state court’s ruling, the magistrate judge issued proposed findings and a recommended disposition applying AEDPA’s deferential standard of review and rejecting all of Mr. Gonzales’s claims. The magistrate judge also denied Mr. Gonzales’s request for an evidentiary hearing, reasoning that the issues could be fully and fairly resolved on the state court record. The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s recommendation.
II. DISCUSSION
On appeal, Mr. Gonzales challenged the district court’s decision as to each of his claims and requested a certificate of ap-pealability. See 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c). In a prior order, this court granted that request. Here, we first summarize the standard of review under AEDPA and then proceed to the analysis of each claim.
A. Standard of Review
Because Mr. Gonzales challenges the New Mexico state courts’ legal conclusions as to the merits of the four claims now at issue, we apply AEDPA’s deferential standard of review.
Johnson v. Mullin,
A decision is “contrary to” clearly established federal law for purposes of § 2254 if “the state court applies a rule that contradicts the governing law set forth in [Supreme Court] cases” or if “the state court confronts a set of facts that are materially indistinguishable from a decision of [the Supreme Court] and nevertheless arrives at a result different from [the Court’s] precedent.”
Williams v. Taylor,
A state court decision involves an “unreasonable application” of federal law if “the state court identifies the correct governing legal principle from [Supreme Court] decisions but unreasonably applies that principle to the facts of the prisoner’s case.”
Id.
at 413,
B. Apprendi Claims
Mr. Gonzales contends that the state courts violated his due process rights by (1) allowing a judge rather than a jury to find that he was neither amenable to treatment nor eligible for commitment; and (2) failing to determine a generally applicable standard of proof.
1. Judicial findings
a. Apprendi’s holding
Mr. Gonzales’s arguments are based on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Apprendi,
In the Supreme Court’s view, that judge-imposed enhancement constituted “an unacceptable departure from the jury tradition that is an indispensable part of our criminal justice system” and therefore violated the defendant’s due process rights.
Id.
The Court explained, “Other than the fact of a prior conviction, any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury and proved beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Id.
at 490,
*1110
Mr. Gonzales maintains that the amenability and commitment findings are analogous to the New Jersey hate crimes statute applied to enhance the defendant’s sentence in
Apprendi:
absent those findings, the maximum sentence that Mr. Gonzales could have received was commitment to a juvenile facility until he turned twenty-one.
See Gonzales,
In considering Mr. Gonzales’s arguments, we are mindful that, when the New Mexico Court of Appeals issued its decision on direct appeal, the United States Supreme Court had not yet issued its post-
Apprendi
sentencing decisions in
United States v. Booker,
In our view, Mr. Gonzales’s arguments have support in some of the language in
Apprendi
itself: there is no dispute that the amenability and commitment findings authorized the judge to impose a maximum adult sentence considerably longer than if he had sentenced Mr. Gonzales as a juvenile.
Cf. State v. Kalmakoff,
However,
Apprendi
did not involve judicial findings that a juvenile should be prosecuted as an adult. Therefore the key question is whether its language regarding “fact[s] that increase!] the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum,”
b. Contrasting views of Apprendi’s application
On that issue, reasonable minds have differed. In
Commonwealth v. Quincy
Q.,
However, the majority of courts have not followed this reasoning.
See generally,
Vannella, 48 Wm. & Mary L.Rev. at 751 (observing that “[o]f the courts that have considered th[e] possibility [that
Apprendi
applies to decisions transferring juveniles to the adult system] ... most have said that
Apprendi
does not apply”);
Kalmakoff,
First, according to some of these courts, a judge’s decision that a juvenile should be
*1112
prosecuted as an adult concerns the court’s jurisdiction, and, as a result,
Apprendi
does not apply.
See, e.g., United States v. Miguel,
Second, some courts have relied upon the differences between the juvenile and adult criminal justice systems. They reason that the Due Process Clause requires “fundamental fairness” in juvenile proceedings but that “fundamental fairness” “does not guarantee juveniles every right criminal defendants enjoy, such as the right to a jury trial.”
See In re Welfare of J.C.P., Jr.,
Third, some courts have distinguished judicial findings supporting the adult prosecution of a juvenile from the findings traditionally made by juries. For example, in this case, the New Mexico Court of Appeals reasoned that the amenability and commitment findings at issue were not measures of the juvenile’s criminal culpability, were not findings of historical fact, and required expertise that juries lacked
(i.e.,
the “foreknowledge of available facilities and the programs in them”).
Gonzales,
c. Applying Apprendi to the New Mexico juvenile system
Some of this reasoning may be inapplicable to the New Mexico juvenile system. As the magistrate judge thoroughly explained, in juvenile prosecutions, New Mexico does not provide for an initial transfer proceeding at which a court decides whether the defendant will be prosecuted as an adult. Instead, in order to trigger the possible imposition of an adult sentence, the prosecution must file a notice of intent within ten days of the delinquency petition.
See
N.M. Stat. Ann. § 32A-2-20(A) (1978, as amended through 1996) (the provision in effect when Mr. Gonzales was prosecuted and sentenced). Then, as we have noted, the juvenile has a state law right to a jury trial in the guilt phase (although Mr. Gonzales did not exercise
*1113
that right here). However, the determination regarding an adult sentence is not made until after the guilt phase of the proceeding, when the judge holds a hearing. Thus, with regard to the New Mexico procedures, one cannot say that the decision regarding an adult sentence “merely establishes a basis for district court jurisdiction.”
See Juvenile,
Similarly, the mere fact that juveniles may not have a federal constitutional right to a jury trial in delinquency proceedings,
see McKeiver,
Nevertheless, in our view, the distinction between the kinds of findings made at the amenabilty hearing and findings traditionally made by juries is a plausible one. Under the New Mexico statute at issue, the judge must make a series of judgments, weighing a variety of factors rather than merely determining particular facts— for example, the seriousness of the offense, the sophistication and maturity of the juvenile offender, his or her record and previous history, the prospects for adequate protection of the public, and the likelihood of reasonable rehabilitation.
See
N.M. Stat. § 32A-2-20(C). We agree with the New Mexico Court of Appeals that many of these judgments may benefit from special skills and experience and involve “a predictive, more than historical, analysis.”
Gonzales,
The distinction between amenability findings and the findings addressed in Ap-prendi is also supported by scholarly opinion. In Professor Berman’s view, Ap-prendi, Blakely, and Booker implicitly recognize an important constitutional distinction between “(1) finding those facts that mandate particular sentencing outcomes based on the predetermined judgments of legislatures or sentencing commission[s] (a task juries must perform), and (2) exercising reasoned judgment at sentencing based on the consideration of relevant sentencing facts (a task judges may perform).” Douglas A. Berman, Conceptualizing Booker, 38 Ariz. St. L.J. 387, 417 (2006). The latter determinations do not involve findings of historical fact (as did Apprendi) but instead “are akin to value judgments that judges have traditionally made when exercising reasoned judgment in the course of selecting an appropriate *1114 sentence.” Id. at 420. As a result, he concludes, the defendant’s constitutional right to a jury trial is not implicated. Under the New Mexico statute, the amenability findings require similar value judgments, and Professor Berman’s analysis thus supports the New Mexico Court of Appeals’s reading of Apprendi. Cf. Feld, 38 Wake Forest L.Rev. at 1221-22 (concluding that “[wjaiver [of juvenile court jurisdiction] is a quintessential sentencing decision that considers myriad individualized facts bearing on ‘amenability’ ” and that therefore is appropriately decided by a judge rather than a jury).
To be sure, other parts of the New Mexico statute do direct the judge to consider historical facts: whether the alleged offense was committed in an aggressive, violent, premeditated or willful manner; whether a firearm was used; and whether the offense was against persons or against property. See N.M. Stat. Ann. § 32A-2-20(C)(2) — ((4)) (1978, as amended through 1996) (provision in effect when Mr. Gonzales was prosecuted and sentenced). Those facts resemble those at issue in Apprendi
Nevertheless, Mr. Gonzales does not here contend that, in deciding to impose an adult sentence, the state court judge exceeded the scope of the guilty plea in finding those particular historical facts. As we see it, Mr. Gonzales’s complaint is not that the judge found that he committed the offenses in an aggressive, violent, premeditated or willful manner, that he possessed a firearm, or that the offenses involved injuries to persons rather than property. In light of the guilty plea, there was no longer a dispute about those matters.
See Blakely,
d. Pre-Apprendi decisions involving juvenile proceedings
We find additional support for that conclusion in the Supreme Court’s pre-Ap-
prendi
decisions involving the juvenile justice system. Those cases hold that delinquency proceedings “must measure up to the essentials of due process and fair treatment.”
See Kent v. United States,
In
Kent,
Thus, Mr. Gonzales’s argument that the amenability findings resemble those at issue in Apprendi and must be made by a jury beyond a reasonable doubt seeks to expand the constitutional requirements for transfer hearings beyond those set forth in Kent. Because Apprendi neither cites Kent nor discusses juvenile transfer hearings at all, the New Mexico Court of Appeals plausibly declined to read Apprendi so broadly and reasonably concluded that the earlier case was controlling.
e. Contrasting traditions
Additionally, Apprendi’s holding is based upon a “historical foundation,”
The same cannot be said for juvenile transfer hearings. At common law, children seven years or older “were subjected to arrest, trial, and in theory to punishment like adult offenders.”
In re Gault,
Of course, the common law approach changed dramatically with the development of juvenile courts in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and the Supreme Court’s landmark decisions extending certain constitutional protections to proceedings in those courts.
See, e.g., In re Winship,
For example, in
Schall v. Martin,
*1116
Under that analysis, when questions of Mr. Gonzales’s amenability to treatment and eligibility to commitment were submitted to a judge rather than a jury, his young age distinguished him from an adult defendant entitled to a jury trial under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments. Unlike
Apprendi,
no “historical foundation ... extending] down the centuries into the common law” required submission of the amenability and commitment questions to “ ‘twelve of [Mr. Gonzales’s] equals and neighbours.’ ”
Apprendi,
In our view, it is also significant that forty-five states and the District of Columbia have enacted statutes allowing judges to transfer juveniles to adult court after making specified findings. Vannella, 48 WM & Mary L.Rev. at 739;
see also
Feld, 38 Wake Forest L.Rev. at 1215 (“Traditionally, most states allowed [juvenile] judges to waive jurisdiction based on a discretionary assessment of a youth’s ‘amenability to treatment’ or ‘dangerousness.’ ”). Although these statutes set forth varying standards of proof (or none at all), “[n]o state has required a [beyond a] reasonable doubt standard before a judge may waive juvenile court jurisdiction.” Vannella, 48 Wm.
&
Mary L. Rev at 740. Of course, the mere existence of these statutes does not resolve the constitutional question before us.
See Schall,
The established practice of “legislative waiver” is also relevant. By one scholar’s reckoning, twenty-nine states have enacted statutes under which juveniles of a certain age who have committed certain acts will automatically be tried in adult courts.
See
Vannella, 48 Wm. & Mary L.Rev. at 741-42. New Mexico law provides an example. Children fifteen years or older who are convicted of first-degree murder may not be sentenced as juveniles.
See
N.M. Stat. § 32A-2-3(H). In these instances of legislative waiver, the transfer to the adult courts is accomplished by statute, unaccompanied by factual findings by either a jury or a judge.
See Kalmakoff,
2. Burden of Proof
Mr. Gonzales also argues that the state court proceedings failed to comport with constitutional due process requirements in another respect. He observes that N.M. Stat. § 32A-2-20 does not specify a burden of proof for amenability hearings. He invokes the Supreme Court’s decision in
Santosky v. Kramer,
In [a prior case] ... the Court held that fundamental fairness may be maintained in parental rights termination proceedings even when some proce *1117 dures are mandated only on a case-by-case basis, rather than through rules of general application. But this Court never has approved case-by-case determination of the proper standard of proof for a given proceeding. Standards of proof, like other procedural due process . rules, are shaped by the risk of error inherent in the truth-finding process as applied to the generality of cases, not the rare exceptions. Since the litigants and the factfinder must know at the outset of a given proceeding how the risk of error will be allocated, the standard of proof necessarily must be calibrated in advance. Retrospective case-by-case review cannot preserve fundamental fairness when a class of proceedings is governed by a constitutionally defective evidentiary standard.
Our review of the state court proceedings establishes that Mr. Gonzales’s argument lacks merit: As the New Mexico Court of Appeals explained, Mr. Gonzales filed a prehearing motion requesting that the trial judge apply the beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard to the amenability hearing. The trial court’s initial ruling did not specify a burden of proof. However, at Mr. Gonzales’s request, the court subsequently clarified that it had used the clear- and-convincing standard.
See Gonzales,
On direct appeal, the parties argued over the correct standard of proof. Although the Court of Appeals concluded that the beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard was not required, it declined to decide whether the proper standard was the clear-and-convincing standard adopted by the trial, court or preponderance of the evidence, as argued by the prosecution. The Court of Appeals did hold that substantial evidence supported the trial court’s findings by clear and convincing evidence.
This procedural history demonstrates that the New Mexico courts did not engage in the kind of case-by-case approach condemned by the Supreme Court in
Santosky.
Unlike the circumstances to which
Santosky
refers, the state trial court did not use “a constitutionally defective evidentiary standard.”
3. Conclusion as to Apprendi claims
We therefore conclude that the New Mexico Court of Appeals’s refusal to apply Apprendi’s holding to juvenile transfer proceedings is neither contrary to nor an unreasonable application of federal law. Thus, Mr. Gonzales is not entitled to relief on his claim that the state court judge violated his Due Process and Sixth Amendment rights by making findings in support of an adult sentence and by applying the clear-and-convincing burden of proof.
*1118 C. Challenge to Guilty Plea
Next, Mr. Gonzales challenges the state courts’ finding that his guilty plea was knowing and voluntary. He invokes (a) affidavits from himself and his mother regarding his motivation for entering the guilty plea and his mental status at the time; (b) expert testimony; (c) the diminished capacity of juveniles in general; and (d) the complexity of these particular proceedings. Mr. Gonzales further argues that the federal district court erred in refusing to grant him an evidentiary hearing on the claim.
Although the state trial court found that Mr. Gonzales’s plea was knowing and voluntary, it did not make specific factual findings supporting that conclusion. Similarly, in the post-conviction proceedings, the state court issued a summary ruling and did not make factual findings regarding this claim. Accordingly, we must determine whether the state court’s legal conclusion that Mr. Gonzales’s plea was knowing and voluntary was contrary to or an unreasonable application of federal law.
See Johnson v. Atherton,
1. Applicable law
A criminal defendant’s state court guilty plea must comport with due process.
Miles v. Dorsey,
In order to be competent to enter a guilty plea, a defendant must be able to consult with his attorney with a reasonable degree of rational understanding and must have “a rational as well as factual understanding of the proceedings against him.”
Allen,
In evaluating challenges to guilty pleas, courts must occasionally assess a defendant’s contention that his mental illness rendered the plea invalid. Although the defendant’s mental illness may be relevant to the general inquiry, it does not in itself establish that the plea violated a defendant’s due process rights.
See Miles,
*1119 2. Mr. Gonzales’s plea
Applying those standards to Mr. Gonzales’s plea, we conclude, for substantially the same reasons set forth by the magistrate judge, that the state courts did not unreasonably apply federal law in accepting his plea.
First, Mr. Gonzales’s competency is supported by the report of Dr. Cave, which was completed two months before he pleaded and which concluded that he “indicated sufficient information to be competent to stand trial.” State Ct. Rec. vol. I, at 62-63. The testimony of Mr. Baca is also important. Although he had some initial concerns about his client’s ability to make rational decisions about his future, Mr. Baca explained that during his meetings with Mr. Gonzales during the six-week period before the entry of the plea, Mr. Gonzales appeared to comprehend the explanations of the proceedings and even asked some fairly sophisticated questions about his defense.
Mr. Baca’s testimony also supports the state courts’ conclusion that the plea was knowing and voluntary. He and Mr. Gonzales discussed the charges and the terms of the plea agreement in some detail. He informed his client of the rights that he would be waiving as well as the maximum sentences that he would face under the plea agreement if he was sentenced as a juvenile and if he was sentenced as an adult. Moreover, Mr. Baca reviewed the agreement with Mr. Gonzales line by line, explaining each paragraph and quizzing him on its contents. Importantly, Mr. Baca recommended the plea agreement. He told Mr. Gonzales that the evidence against him was strong and that the possible defenses (including self-defense, an alibi, or duress) were not plausible.
The written documents accompanying the plea agreement also support the state courts’ rejection of Mr. Gonzales’s challenge. Prior to entering the plea, Mr. Gonzales, Mr. Baca, and the state court judge reviewed and signed an “Admission Proceeding” and a “Plea and Disposition Agreement.” State Ct. Rec. vol. I, at 73-76. These documents set forth the charges to which Mr. Gonzales would plead, the maximum adult and the maximum juvenile sentences as to each charge, the rights that Mr. Gonzales would waive if he pleaded guilty, and the sentencing procedures that would follow the entry of the guilty plea (i.e., that the judge would conduct an amenability hearing and retain discretion to sentence Mr. Gonzales as a juvenile or as an adult).
Finally, the plea colloquy supports the state courts’ rejection of Mr. Gonzales’s claim. The state court judge asked Mr. Gonzales if he understood the plea agreement and if he agreed with it, and Mr. Gonzales responded affirmatively. Mr. Gonzales told the judge that he understood the charges against him and the rights he would waive if he pleaded. He added that he was satisfied with the representation of Mr. Baca. Mr. Gonzales admitted the prosecution’s allegations as to each count, and he stated that his admissions were voluntary, that no one had threatened him, and that no one had promised him anything other that what was set forth in the “Admission Proceeding” and the “Plea and Disposition Agreement.” The judge asked if Mr. Gonzales was taking any medication that interfered with his ability to understand the proceedings, and Mr. Gonzales said no. When the judge asked him if he was sure that he wanted to plead, Mr. Gonzales said “yes.”
In light of the observations of Dr. Cave and Mr. Baca, the written documents signed by Mr. Gonzales, the plea colloquy, and the trial judge’s findings, the specific arguments that Mr. Gonzales advances here are not persuasive. They do not *1120 undermine the state courts’ conclusion that he was competent to enter his plea and that he did so knowingly and voluntarily.
In particular, the affidavits from Mr. Gonzales and his mother report that he pleaded guilty because he wanted to be released from state custody pending sentencing. Significantly, the affidavits do
not
state that anyone promised Mr. Gonzales that he would be allowed to go home if he pleaded. Moreover, such a promise would be inconsistent with Mr. Gonzales’s own assurances to the judge that he had received no promises other than what was contained in the plea agreement. Those assurances “carry a strong presumption of verity,”
Lasiter v. Thomas,
Additionally, even accepting the contention that Mr. Gonzales was motivated by a desire to be released from state custody, that motivation does not establish that his plea was not knowing and voluntary. Other than a release from custody pending sentencing, there were ample reasons to accept the
plea
— e.g., the strength of the prosecution’s case and the significant risk of a much greater sentence if the case went to trial before a jury or a judge. Given these reasons, the record provides substantial support for the conclusion that Mr. Gonzales had “a full understanding of what the plea connotefd] and of its consequence,”
Boykin,
As to the expert testimony now invoked by Mr. Gonzales, we note that, at most, Dr. Thompson’s evaluation, conducted more than five years after the guilty plea proceedings, indicates that there are some differences of opinion about Mr. Gonzales’s mental health and its effect on his understanding of the proceedings. Importantly, Dr. Thompson’s evaluation does not state that Mr. Gonzales was incompetent or that his plea was not knowing and voluntary.
Cf. Miles,
As to the diminished capacity of juveniles in general, we agree with Mr. Gonzales that the defendant’s young age presents a matter of serious concern in determining whether to accept a plea.
Cf. Roper v. Simmons,
*1121 Finally, the complexities presented by New Mexico’s juvenile procedure do not alter our conclusion. The fact that Mr. Gonzales was required to decide whether to plead guilty without knowing if he would be sentenced as an adult or as a juvenile may well have made the proceedings more difficult for such a young defendant to understand. Nevertheless, the record establishes that the state court judge and Mr. Gonzales’s counsel explained the process to him in considerable detail, both orally and in writing, and that they reasonably concluded that he understood the New Mexico procedures.
Accordingly, we conclude that the state courts’ rejection of Mr. Gonzales’s challenge to his plea was neither contrary to nor an unreasonable application of federal law.
3. Evidentiary Hearing
In the alternative, Mr. Gonzales contends that the district court should have afforded him an evidentiary hearing so that he could further develop the factual basis for his challenge'to his guilty plea. In rejecting that argument, the magistrate judge reasoned that Mr. Gonzales’s claims were either contravened by the existing factual record or, even if considered true, would not entitle him to relief.
A habeas petitioner who has not failed to develop the factual basis for his claim in state court is entitled to an evidentiary hearing in federal court “so long as his allegations, if true and if not contravened by the existing factual record, would entitle him to habeas relief.”
Anderson,
In light of that standard, we discern no abuse of discretion in the denial of Mr. Gonzales’s request.
See Anderson,
D. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claim
Mr. Gonzales contends that the New Mexico state courts and the federal district court erred in rejecting his Sixth Amendment claim for ineffective assistance of counsel. He cites six instances of allegedly deficient performance by the counsel that- represented him at the amenability hearing: (1) failing to correct the testimony of Sonde Harley Grano, a psychotherapist who treated him and testified at the amenability hearing; (2) failing to object to the trial court’s reliance on the effects of a sexual assault that occurred while he was in state custody; (3) failing to obtain a neuropsychological evaluation; (4) failing to object to the trial court’s reliance on evidence of prior misbehavior that did not result in a conviction; (5) agreeing to Mr Gonzales’s evaluation by the New Mexico Youth, Diagnostic, and Development Center in Albuquerque, New Mexico; and (6) fading to challenge the qualifications of Ray Garley, a New Mexico probation officer who testified that Mr. Gonzales was not amenable to treatment. Mr. Gonzales further argues that (7) he was severely prejudiced by the cumulative effect of these errors in that, if not for his counsel’s mistakes, he would have been sentenced as a juvenile.
Mr. Gonzales raised his ineffective assistance of counsel claim in post-conviction
*1122
proceedings in the New Mexico state courts, which denied them in summary rulings. Because the courts reached the merits of Mr. Gonzales’s claims, we apply AEDPA’s deferential standard of review.
See Webber v. Scott,
Like the New Mexico courts, we must examine Mr. Gonzales’s claims under the well-established framework set forth in
Strickland v. Washington,
Upon review of the record, we agree with the magistrate judge’s analysis of Mr. Gonzales’s ineffective assistance claims. On both the deficient performance and prejudice prongs, Mr. Gonzales has failed to establish that the state court’s rejection of his claims was contrary to or an unreasonable application of federal law.
1. Failing to correct the testimony of Sonde Harley-Grano,
In announcing its findings at the amenability hearing, the trial court cited the testimony of Sonde Harley-Grano, a psychotherapist who had treated Mr. Gonzales. Ms. Harley-Grano had testified that Mr. Gonzales was amenable to treatment and eligible for commitment. However, she had qualified her opinion to some extent. She explained that the best predictor of future behavior is past behavior, that Mr. Gonzales “still carries risk with him,” and that “there’s nothing certain in this field.” Fed. Dist. Ct. Rec. vol. Ill, doc. 65, at 90 (magistrate judge’s proposed findings and recommended disposition) (quoting Jan. 11, 1999 Hr’g, tape 3). The trial court interpreted her testimony as follows:
I guess really one of [the] things that made me think the most about this case was the testimony of Sonde Harley-Gra-no.... [S]he said [Mr. Gonzales] used to be dangerous and would do all kinds of crazy things. He is now passive and docilef,] and [she] doesn’t think it is due to the medications he was on. She thinks he has made personality changes, but she can’t be sure.... She went on to say that his potential to do something terrible is greatly reduced, but he is likely to do this again.... [I]t’s her feeling that this is gonna happen again.
Id. at 92-93 (quoting May 3, 1999 Hr’g, tape 3) (emphasis supplied by the magistrate judge).
Both the New Mexico Court of Appeals and the magistrate judge concluded that the trial judge appeared to misunderstand Ms. Harley-Grano’s testimony to
*1123
some extent.
See Gonzales,
Mr. Gonzales now argues that his counsel was constitutionally deficient for failing to correct the judge’s misunderstanding. Like the magistrate judge, we disagree. Even though there is no indication that Ms. Harley-Grano expressly stated that Mr.- Gonzales was “likely to do this again,” the trial judge’s evaluation of her testimony, although debatable, was not unreasonable. Parts of her. testimony may be plausibly read to undermine her ultimate conclusion that Mr. Gonzales was amenable to treatment. As a result, it was also not unreasonable for the state courts to conclude that Mr. Gonzales’s counsel’s failure to object to the trial judge’s assessment of the testimony did not fall outside “the range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases.”
Strickland,
Moreover, Mr. Gonzales’s has failed to establish that, if not for his counsel’s failure to object, there was a reasonable probability that the trial judge would have reached a different result. The New Mexico statute requires the judge to weigh a variety of factors, including not only a juvenile’s prospects for rehabilitation but also the seriousness of the offense; whether it was committed in an aggressive, violent, premeditated or willful manner; whether the juvenile used a firearm; and whether the offense involved injuries to persons rather than property. See N.M. Stat. § 32A-2-20(B). Many of these factors may be plausibly applied to the facts here to support an adult sentence. Additionally, despite the fact that other mental health experts agreed with Mr. Harley-Grano that Mr. Gonzales was amenable to treatment, the trial judge had discretion to evaluate their testimony along with the other relevant evidence and to disagree with their opinions. Thus, the state courts’ rejection of this ineffective assistance claim is also not contrary to or an unreasonable application of Strickland’s prejudice prong.
2. Failing to object to reliance on sexual assault evidence
During the amenability hearing, the court heard evidence that Mr. Gonzales had reported that he had been sexually assaulted by another juvenile and that he suffered post-traumatic stress as a result. Mr. Gonzales now contends that his counsel was constitutionally deficient in failing to object to the trial court’s reliance on that evidence. He cites cases holding that the-state has a duty to ensure the safety of prisoners in its custody. His argument seems to be that the trial judge erred in relying upon the trauma that Mr. Gonzales had suffered as a result of the assault .to support his finding of non-amenability to treatment. In his view, the state was precluded from relying on psychological. difficulties caused by its own negligence in arguing for an adult sentence.
We will assume for the sake of this discussion that the sexual assault did occur. Moreover, we do not dispute the proposition that the state has a responsibility to protect those in its custody from such assaults.
See Benefield v. McDowall,
In particular, Mr. Gonzales’s argument is undermined by the fact that in announcing its decision that it would sentence Mr. Gonzales as an adult, the trial court did not expressly refer to the sexual assault at all. We acknowledge that the court did refer to Ms. Harley-Grano’s testimony and to Probation Officer Garley’s report and that both of them discussed the sexual assault. Moreover, in discussing the assault, Mr. Garley’s report stated that “failing to accept and/or deal with the incident,” was “not [a] characteristic[ ] that [is] conducive to positive growth and development.” State Ct. Rec. vol. I, at 114. Nevertheless, given the broad inquiry authorized by the New Mexico statutes governing amenability hearings, it was not improper for those witnesses to discuss the assault insofar as it affected Mr. Gonzales’s mental health. As a result, it was not unreasonable for the state courts to refuse to find that Mr. Gonzales’s counsel was constitutionally deficient in failing to object to this evidence.
Additionally, for similar reasons, we conclude that Mr. Gonzales has failed to establish a reasonable probability of a different result if his counsel had made such an objection. Although the sexual assault may well have exacerbated Mr. Gonzales’s difficulties, the record contains substantial evidence that those difficulties were serious and longstanding, even absent that incident.
3. Failing to seek a neurological evaluation
Mr. Gonzales argues that his counsel was deficient for failing to obtain a neuropsychological evaluation prior to his sentencing. He notes that the subsequent evaluation by Dr. Thompson (completed during the state post-conviction proceedings) revealed indications of organic brain dysfunction.
We agree with the state that Mr. Gonzales’s counsel’s strategy was a reasonable one and that the failure to obtain a neurop-sychological evaluation was not deficient. Mr. Gonzales’s counsel offered evidence from four experts that included testimony about a possible brain injury. However, the decision not to further emphasize the possible brain injury was reasonable: such an emphasis might have undermined the argument that Mr. Gonzales’s mental health problems were treatable. Moreover, given the abundant mental health testimony contained in the state court record, Mr. Gonzales has failed to establish that the additional evidence provided by such an evaluation would raise a reasonable possibility that the trial judge would have sentenced him as a juvenile.
4. Failing to object to the use of uncharged acts
During the state court proceedings, Mr. Garley, the juvenile probation officer, wrote a report that included accounts of prior incidents of violent and antisocial behavior by Mr. Gonzales. In including this information, Mr. Garley relied on a letter written by Ms. HarleyGrano, which described some of these incidents. The trial judge referred to these incidents when he announced his findings at the amenability hearing. Mr. Gonzales now argues that these incidents involved uncharged conduct and that Mr. Gonzales’s trial counsel should have objected to them, or, at the very least, argued that the court should give little weight to them.
Again, we are not persuaded that counsel’s failure to object constituted deficient
*1125
performance under
Strickland.
As the magistrate judge observed, the New Mexico statute directs the court to consider “the record and previous history of the child” as well as “any other relevant factor, provided that factor is stated on the record.” N.M. Stat. § 32A-2-20(C)(6)
&
(8). That language is broad enough to allow the court to consider the unadjudicated acts to which Mr. Gonzales now objects.
Cf. United States v. Anthony Y.,
Moreover, contrary to Mr. Gonzales’s contentions, his counsel sought to minimize the significance of the unadjudicated acts. Finally, as with Mr. Gonzales’s other ineffective assistance claims, he has also failed to establish the required prejudice.
5. Agreeing to an evaluation by the Youth Diagnostic and Detention Center (YDDC) in Albuquerque, New Mexico,
Mr. Gonzales argues that his counsel was constitutionally deficient in agreeing to an evaluation at YDDC. We disagree.
During the amenability proceedings, the trial court expressed its belief that a YDDC evaluation would not be useful. However, despite these initial views, the court eventually ordered an evaluation at YDDC. The staff there produced a report that found Mr. Gonzales amenable to treatment and recommended placement in a juvenile facility, until age twenty-one. See State Ct. Rec. vol. I, at 100-05.
In announcing its finding, the court again expressed its dissatisfaction with YDDC. This time, the court expressed its disapproval of the staffs failure to consider the unadjudicated violent and antisocial behavior noted in Probation Officer Gar-ley’s report. The court also questioned the credibility of a YDDC psychologist, who testified that the prior misconduct would not have made a difference in his diagnosis.
Like the magistrate, judge, we conclude that the state courts reasonably rejected this ineffective assistance claim as well. As the magistrate explained, the YDDC evaluation was requested by the probation officer. Mr. Gonzales’s counsel did not agree that the evaluation was necessary, and he objected to it. At one point, counsel did state that “i/it’s going to happen, it seems that YDDC should probably do it.”
See
Aplt’s Br. at 51 (quoting Feb. 2, 1999 Hr’g at 3.49) (emphasis added). However, at most that statement indicates some disagreement with the trial court about the competence of the YDDC staff. It does not come close to establishing that counsel’s performance was outside “the range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases.”
Strickland,
6. Failing to object to evaluation by Mr. Garley
Mr. Gonzales also contends that his counsel was deficient in failing to suffi *1126 ciently challenge Mr. Garley’s report. As we have noted, Mr. Garley disagreed with the four mental health experts who evaluated Mr. Gonzales. In his view, Mr. Gonzales was neither amenable to treatment nor eligible for commitment. See State Ct. Rec. vol. I, at 114. Mr. Garley concluded that Mr. Gonzales had failed to accept responsibility for Mr. Lucero’s murder.
Like the magistrate judge, we do not agree that Mr. Gonzales failed to adequately challenge Mr. Garley’s report. Counsel presented witnesses to respond to the report, including Ms. Harley-Grano. In addition, at the conclusion of the amenability hearing, counsel presented proposed findings of fact that directly challenged Mr. Garley’s testimony, noting that Mr. Garley had never before written a report addressing a juvenile’s amenability to treatment, that he did not have full access to voluminous treatment records, and that “Mr. Garley appears to base his opinions on a few comments allegedly made by the child, rather than upon a review of the entire history and data in this case.” State Ct. Rec. vol. I, at 138. Given these efforts to rebut Mr. Garley’s report, counsel’s performance was not deficient under Strickland and the state court’s rejection of this claim was neither contrary to nor an unreasonable application of federal law.
7. Cumulative Error
Finally, Mr. Gonzales argues that he was prejudiced by the cumulative effect of his counsel’s errors. Under
Strickland,
“all acts of inadequate performance may be cumulated in order to conduct the prejudice prong.”
Gonzales v. McKune
We further note that, contrary to Mr. Gonzales contentions, his counsel’s performance reflects a sound and well-executed strategy. Counsel produced a series of qualified witnesses who supported the argument that a juvenile sentence was warranted. The fact that the trial court was not persuaded by counsel’s arguments does not support Mr. Gonzales’s challenge to their competence but rather reflects the challenging facts with which they were confronted.
E. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Finally, Mr. Gonzales argues that the New Mexico Court of Appeals unreasonably concluded that the evidence was sufficient to warrant his sentencing as an adult. He invokes the expert testimony indicating that he was amenable to treatment as well as the testimony of one witness who stated that there were several facilities that indicated a willingness to provide inpatient treatment for him, thereby suggesting that he was eligible for commitment.
Under the Due Process Clause, evidence is sufficient if, “viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements” under the appropriate standard of proof.
See Dockins v. Hines,
Here, the Court of Appeals applied several principles of New Mexico law. First, noting that the trial court had disagreed with mental health experts who found Mr. Gonzales amenable to treatment, the Court of Appeals observed that “it is well settled in New Mexico that a factfinder may disregard the opinions of experts.”
Gonzales,
Mindful of those principles, the New Mexico Court of Appeals concluded that the evidence was sufficient to support the trial court’s findings. As to amenability to treatment, the court reasoned that the evidence was not as clear as Mr. Gonzales had suggested: “the testimony indicated that he carried the risk of violence with him and that it was impossible to predict whether he would re-offend.” Id. at 788. In addition, one of the experts testified that Mr. Gonzales’s progress had been sporadic, and several expressed concern over his apparent lack of remorse for the murder. As to eligibility for commitment, one witness testified that Mr. Gonzales’s mental status would need to decline significantly before he could be committed. Others testified that while Mr. Gonzales might be eligible for some degree of residential treatment, he was eligible for neither high security residential treatment nor commitment to an institution for the developmentally disabled.
In light of the evidence and state law principles cited in the Court of Appeals opinion, we conclude that its assessment of the evidence was reasonable. Although Mr. Gonzales offered evidence to support the imposition of a juvenile sentence, considerable evidence supported the trial court’s findings that Mr. Gonzales was neither amenable to treatment nor eligible for commitment. The Court of Appeals employed the clear and convincing standard that the trial court used, and not the beyond a reasonable doubt standard generally applicable to criminal prosecutions. However, we have already concluded in rejecting Mr. Gonzales’s Apprendi claim that the application of the former standard to the amenability hearing was not contrary to or an unreasonable application of federal law. We therefore agree with the district court that Mr. Gonzales is not entitled to habeas relief on this claim.
III. CONCLUSION
This is a tragic case, both in terms of the vicious underlying crime and Mr. Gonzales’s troubled health history and life style. The decision whether to prosecute *1128 Mr. Gonzales as a juvenile or as an adult was particularly difficult. As the trial judge observed, strong arguments supported both alternatives, and the statutory factors pointed in both directions.
Nevertheless, the difficulty of that decision does not establish that Mr. Gonzales was entitled to jury at the amenability hearing. Like other states, New Mexico’s juvenile justice system reflects a rehabilitative purpose and directs the decision-maker to make an individualized assessment of the defendant with that purpose in mind. That task is suited for the particular experience and skill of a judge, and the Supreme Court’s decision in Apprendi, which addressed findings of historical fact by juries in criminal trials, does not clearly alter that view.
New Mexico’s system differs from that of many states in an important respect: the judge’s decision whether the juvenile will be treated as an adult comes after an adjudication of guilt and can thus be fairly characterized as part of the sentencing decision rather than a preliminary determination as to which court has jurisdiction. However, that distinction does not render the New Mexico system constitutionally infirm. Although there are some advantages to the other approach, the states retain discretion to devise their own juvenile justice systems so long as constitutional difficulties do not arise. We hold today that New Mexico’s procedures, particularly under the AEDPA standard of review, do not conflict with Supreme Court law.
Because Mr. Gonzales’s other claims also lack merit, we therefore AFFIRM the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition.
Notes
. The New Mexico Supreme Court has ruled that if he or she is charged with a crime that is a felony if committed by an adult, a juvenile is entitled under the New Mexico Constitution to a jury trial during the guilt phase of the proceedings.
See Peyton v. Nord,
. We note that a colorable argument exists that Mr. Gonzales waived his right to assert the argument that
Apprendi
required a jury to find the facts pertaining to amenability. In his plea admission proceeding, all of the sentencing options, including the possibility of being sentenced as an adult on each count were recited. Mr. Gonzales then specifically gave up “any and all motions, defenses, objections or requests ... to the Court’s entry of Disposition against him and imposition of sentence upon him consistent with this agreement.” State Ct. Rec. vol. I, at 74;
see also id.
at 75 (“All sentencing/disposition shall be left in the Court's discretion.”). In
Blakely,
the Court clarified that "nothing prevents a defendant from waiving his
Apprendi
rights. When a defendant pleads guilty, the State is free to seek judicial sentence enhancements so long as the defendant either stipulates to the relevant facts or consents to judicial fact-finding.”
. The required findings were: "(1) the alleged offense was committed while the individual was between the ages of fourteen and seventeen years; (2) if he were an adult, the offense would be punishable by imprisonment in the State prison (i.e., a felony); and (3) the individual was previously committed to the department of youth services,
or
the alleged offense involved certain enumerated firearms violations,
or
it involved ‘the infliction or threat of serious bodily harm.’ ”
Quincy Q.,
