Lead Opinion
Petitioner-appellant Don Wilson Hawkins appeals the denial of habeas relief, see 28 U.S.C. § 2254, from his Oklahoma first-degree felony murder conviction and death sentence. Among other claims, Hawkins argues that the State improperly based his first-degree felony murder conviction on kidnapping for extortion, which is not a specifically enumerated felony supporting a first-degree murder conviction under Oklahoma law. The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, nevertheless, interpreted Oklahoma’s first-degree felony murder statute to include kidnapping for extortion as an underlying felony. We hold that the Oklahoma appellate court’s interpretation was not unforeseeable and therefore did not deprive Hawkins of due process. We therefore affirm the district court’s denial of habeas relief on this claim, as well as on Hawkins’s other claims.
I. FACTS
On August 19, 1985, Hawkins, aimed with a revolver, forced his way into Linda Thompson’s car, as she purchased stamps at a self-service postal station at a shopping mall near her home. Thompson’s two small daughters, Lori, age four, and Katie, eighteen months old, were also in the car at the time. According to Hawkins, his original plan was to kidnap Thompson and hold her for ransom. Hawkins drove the victims to the home of Shirley Pitts, with whom Hawkins had been living for several months. Pitts’s fifteen-year-old nephew, Chris Lovell, and Hawkins’s cousin, Dale Shelton, were staying with the couple at that time.
At the house, Pitts and Lovell watched the children. Hawkins and Shelton kept Thompson upstairs in the house for several hours. Later that night, they took Thompson to a barn several hundred yards away, where they kept her chained in the barn’s loft. Her children remained locked in a bedroom in the house.
Shelton and Lovell each raped Thompson. During the night, they did allow Thompson to see her children at the house. In the morning, after permitting Thompson briefly to say goodbye to her daughters, Hawkins and Shelton drove Linda Thompson to a nearby lake, where Hawkins hog-tied and drowned her, while Shelton stood lookout. Hawkins and Shelton hid the body and fled the state. Pitts and Lovell left Thompson’s daughters with their babysitter.
Police arrested Pitts and Lovell later that day. California police arrested Hawkins and Shelton two months later, in Sacramento. Following his arrest, Hawkins made a statement to Oklahoma detectives admitting these crimes, including drowning Thompson because she otherwise could be a witness against him.
The jury convicted Hawkins of the first-degree felony murder of Linda Thompson and two counts of kidnapping her children for extortion. The jury sentenced him to life imprisonment on the two kidnapping-for-extortion convictions, which Hawkins had committed after two or more prior felony convictions.
During the capital sentencing proceeding, the State incorporated its first-stage evidence and presented additional evidence concerning Hawkins’s further violent criminal conduct. That evidence established that, after Thompson’s murder, Hawkins had kidnapped, raped, and sodomized two teenage girls in San Diego, California. The following day, he had kidnapped and robbed two other women, one of whom his accomplice had raped and sodomized. In addition, immediately prior to Thompson’s murder, Hawkins had killed a man in Denver, Colorado. Hawkins had also beaten his girlfriend Pitts and kept her locked in
Hawkins instructed his defense attorney, during the trial’s second stage, not to raise any objections or cross-examine any State witnesses. Hawkins also directed his attorney not to put on any evidence in mitigation or present any opening or closing argument.
Jurors found all four of the charged aggravating factors: 1) Hawkins had killed Thompson to avoid arrest; 2) Thompson’s murder was especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel; 3) Hawkins is a continuing threat to society; and 4) Hawkins had previously been convicted of a violent felony. The jury then sentenced Hawkins to death. The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed Hawkins’s convictions and sentences on direct appeal, see Hawkins v. State,
The State also tried Shelton jointly with Hawkins. The jury convicted Shelton of first-degree felony murder, first-degree rape and forcible oral sodomy, all involving Linda Thompson, and of kidnapping Thompson’s two children for extortion. Jurors sentenced Shelton to five consecutive life sentences. See Shelton v. State,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), Hawkins will be entitled to habeas relief only if he can establish that the state courts’ resolution of his claims was “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established” Supreme Court precedent, or 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). We will presume correct any state-court factual finding, absent clear and convincing evidence to the contrary. See id. § 2254(e)(1). If the state courts did not address Hawkins’s habeas claims’ merit, however, we will review the district court’s decision de novo, and any factual findings only for clear error. See, e.g., Romano v. Gibson,
III. ISSUES
A. Basing first-degree felong murder conviction on kidnapping for extortion. At the time this crime occurred, in October 1985, Oklahoma defined first-degree felony murder as “tak[ing] the life of a human being, regardless of malice, in the commission of forcible rape, robbery with a dangerous weapon, kidnapping, escape from lawful custody, first degree burglary or first degree arson.” Okla. Stat. tit. 21, § 701.7(B) (1983) (subsequently amended). Hawkins challenges his first-degree felony murder conviction because the State charged him with, and the jury convicted him of, first-degree felony murder based upon kidnapping for extortion, see id. § 745, a separate offense from simple kidnapping, see id. § 741, under Oklahoma law. Nonetheless, in rejecting this claim, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals held that the Oklahoma legislature, by referring to “kidnapping” in the first-degree felony murder statute, intended to include all forms of kidnapping made criminal under Oklahoma law. See Opinion, No. PC 96-1271, at 6-7 (Okla.Crim.App. Mar. 18, 1998).
Although Hawkins challenges the state court’s interpretation of Oklahoma’s first-degree felony murder statute, this court is bound by the state court’s interpretation of its own law. See, e.g., Mulla-
1. Exhaustion/procedural default. The State first argues to this court that Hawkins failed to exhaust this claim in state court and that, were he to raise it now, the state courts would deem it procedurally barred. Hawkins did fail to object when the trial court instructed on, and the jury then convicted Hawkins of, first-degree felony murder based upon kidnapping for extortion. Nor did he raise this issue on direct appeal. After his direct appeal, however, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals stated in dicta in Richie v. State,
Following Richie, Hawkins applied for state post-conviction relief, challenging the trial court’s jurisdiction to sentence him to death because the felony underlying his first-degree felony murder conviction, kidnapping for extortion, was not one of the felonies enumerated in § 701.7(B). The state appellate court addressed the merits of that claim in order to avoid any miscarriage of justice. See Opinion, No. PC 96-1271, at 4, 5-7. In denying relief, the state appellate court held that the Oklahoma legislature had intended § 701.7(B)’s reference to “kidnapping” to include kidnapping for extortion as a felony that would support a first-degree felony murder conviction. See id. at 6-7. In so holding, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals rejected Richie’s dicta to the contrary. See id. at 7.
Where, as here, “a state court [actually] decides an issue on the merits, state procedural bars will not preclude federal habeas review.” Hooks v. Ward,
The State also argues that, in any event, Hawkins has never asserted the crux of his current federal claim challenging the foreseeability of the state court’s interpretation of Oklahoma’s first-degree felony murder statute. Hawkins, however, did present the “essential substance” of this claim to the state court in his state post-conviction application. Engberg v. Wyoming,
2. Merits. Hawkins asserts that the state appellate court’s decision to deny him state post-conviction relief unforeseeably extends Oklahoma’s first-degree felony murder statute to include kidnapping for extortion, depriving him of due process.
“[A] criminal statute must give fair warning-” Bouie,
McDonald v. Champion,
In making this foreseeability determination, this court in McDonald made two inquiries. First, we considered whether Oklahoma’s first-degree felony murder statute, Okla. Stat. tit. 21, § 701.7(B), was “narrow and precise” on its face. McDonald,
In fact, under Oklahoma law, most kidnappings for extortion, see Okla. Stat. tit. 21, § 745, could also be charged simply as kidnapping, under § 741. Oklahoma law defines kidnapping, as relevant here, to apply to “[ejvery person who, without lawful authority, forcibly seizes and confines another, or inveigles or kidnaps another, with intent ... [t]o cause such other person to be secretly confined or imprisoned ... against his will.” Id. § 741 (1983). Kidnapping for extortion, on the other hand, applies, in relevant part, to “[ejvery person who, without lawful authority, forcibly seizes and confines another, or inveigles or kidnaps another, for the purpose of extorting any money, property or thing of value or advantage from the person ... kidnapped, or from any other person.... ” Id. § 745(A) (1983). While kidnapping for extortion, therefore, does require a differ
Therefore, we cannot say the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, in denying Hawkins post-conviction relief, has applied its first-degree felony murder statute “to conduct ‘clearly’ outside of its reach.... [W]e cannot say that the language failed to put [Hawkins] on notice of the potential consequences of his actions.” McDonald,
Nonetheless, “[t]his does not end our inquiry.... A judicial expansion of a statute may be unforeseeable even though the statutory language is not ‘narrow and precise.’ ” Id. McDonald’s second inquiry, therefore, is “whether the [state court’s] construction is so unexpected and indefensible by reference to the law which had been expressed prior to the conduct at issue as to prevent its application retroactively.” Id. at 1458 (further quotations omitted); see also, e.g., Rogers,
Our analysis focuses on the law at the time Hawkins committed these crimes. See, e.g., Rogers,
Prior to 1973, any felony in Oklahoma would have supported a capital first-degree felony murder conviction. See McDonald,
Furthermore, interpreting the 1976 statute to eliminate kidnapping by extortion as a felony that could support a first-degree felony murder conviction reaches an irrational result. See id. at 1460 (considering rationality of state court’s statutory interpretation when determining that interpretation’s foreseeability). Oklahoma punishes simple kidnapping with no more than ten years’ imprisonment. See Okla. Stat. tit. 21, § 741. Kidnapping for extortion, on the other hand, apparently the more serious offense under Oklahoma law, is punishable by imprisonment for no less than ten years. See id. § 745(A). Yet, interpreting the first-degree felony murder statute to include only kidnapping under § 741, and not kidnapping for extortion under § 745, reaches the irrational result that the lesser kidnapping offense could support a capital murder conviction, while the greater offense, kidnapping for extortion, could not.
Moreover, including kidnapping for extortion in § 701.7(B)’s reference to kidnapping is in keeping with the Oklahoma legislature’s
policy that one who, by his wilfull criminal conduct, sets in motion a chain of events so perilous to the sanctity of life that death results therefrom[ ] must bear the ultimate responsibility for his actions.Proscribing such actions under [Oklahoma’s] first-degree murder statutes performs the rational function of deterring the commission of felonies so inherently dangerous as to create foreseeable risks of death.
Hatch v. State,
Finally, although at the time Hawkins committed these crimes, Oklahoma law had not addressed the specific question presented here, Oklahoma courts had already declined to restrict § 701.7(B)’s application strictly to only those crimes expressly mentioned there. Again, in James,
For these reasons, we cannot conclude that the Oklahoma appellate court’s interpreting its first-degree felony murder statute to include kidnapping for extortion was “so ‘unexpected and indefensible’” as to deprive Hawkins of due process. McDonald,
B. Ineffective trial representation. In his second claim, Hawkins contends that his trial attorney was ineffective during the capital sentencing proceeding because the attorney failed to investigate and present mitigating evidence. See Appellant’s opening br. at 25; see also Dist. Ct. R. doc. 14 at 22-23 (§ 2254 petition). Hawkins further asserts that he, himself, could not knowingly and voluntarily waive presenting mitigating evidence because his defense attorney failed to explain mitigating evidence adequately to him. See Appellant’s opening br. at 25-26; see also Dist. Ct. R. at 28 (§ 2254 petition). The State argues, however, that Hawkins never presented these specific ineffective-assistance arguments to any state court and that this habeas claim thus remains unex-hausted. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1)(A).
In order to exhaust his state remedies, a federal habeas petitioner must have first fairly presented the substance of his federal habeas claim to state courts. See, e.g., O’Sullivan,
During his capital sentencing proceeding, Hawkins instructed his defense attorney not to present any mitigating evidence or argument, and not to cross-examine the State’s witnesses or raise any objections. On direct appeal, then, Hawkins alleged that he had been “denied the effective assistance of counsel when the trial judge, over defense counsel’s objection, allowed [Hawkins] to commit state sanctioned suicide.” Appellant’s direct-appeal br. at 22. Hawkins further argued to the state appellate court:
The issue before this Court is: Who controls the case — the lawyer of the misguided client? In other words, this Court must decide if a defendant is entitled [to] a fair trial even when he says he does not want one. In this case, despite trial counsel’s desire to put on closing argument during the penalty phase, the trial judge acquiesced to Appellant’s desire to prevent presentation of such an argument. Also, the record reveals defense counsel was precluded from putting on mitigation evidence because of Appellant’s suicidal decision not to contest the State’s case. Trial counsel’s strategic decisions are binding and the trial court denied Appellant the effective assistance of counsel by not allowing his lawyer to do his job. Specifically, in this case, the trial judge kept defense counsel from giving a closing*669 argument and presenting evidence in mitigation of the death penalty.
Id.
Additionally, Hawkins argued on direct appeal that, even if a capital defendant could waive closing argument and the opportunity to present mitigating evidence, the trial court here failed to make an adequate record to insure that Hawkins did knowingly and voluntarily make such a waiver. See id. at 40. In part, Hawkins complained that the trial court failed to inform him of the consequences of waiving his opportunity to present mitigating evidence and closing argument. See id. at 42-44, 47.
In his state post-conviction relief application, on the other hand, the only challenge to his trial representation that Hawkins asserted was that defense counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge the trial court’s jurisdiction, because the first-degree felony murder charge was based upon kidnapping for extortion, rather than kidnapping. See State post-conviction relief app. at 5.
It was not until his federal habeas petition, then, that Hawkins first argued instead that his defense attorney was ineffective for failing to investigate possible mitigating evidence. See § 2254 pet. at 22-24, 29. Hawkins also argued for the first time that he could not knowingly and voluntarily waive presenting mitigating evidence because his defense attorney failed to explain mitigating evidence to him adequately. See id. at 28.
While Hawkins’s state-court claims focused on the trial court’s actions, then, Hawkins asserts different arguments in these federal habeas proceedings, in which he specifically challenges only defense counsel’s failings. Thus, Hawkins has never fairly presented the substance of his federal habeas claim to any state court. See, e.g., O’Sullivan,
Moreover, in addition to providing state courts the initial opportunity to address a criminal defendant’s federal claims, see, e.g., Williams v. Taylor,
Thus, under AEDPA, because Hawkins failed to develop diligently the factual basis of his current habeas claim, § 2254(e)(2) will permit “a federal eviden-tiary hearing only in very limited circumstances where, among other requirements, the claim relies on ‘a new rule of constitutional law ... ’ or ‘a factual predicate that could not have been previously discovered through the exercise of due diligence.’” Romano,
Thus, because Hawkins failed to raise this claim in state court, it remains unex-hausted and Oklahoma courts would now deem it procedurally barred. See Coleman,
C. Failure to appoint investigator. Prior to trial, Hawkins asked the trial court to appoint an investigator to go to California to investigate the circumstances surrounding Hawkins’s custodial statements made to Oklahoma detectives while Hawkins was in custody in Sacramento. See O.R. at 105. The trial court, however, denied this request, asserting that it did not know of any statutory basis for the court to do so and noting that Ake v. Oklahoma,
“A state must provide an indigent defendant with the basic tools to present an adequate defense or appeal.” Rojem, v. Gibson,
We consider three factors to determine what tools of defense are required:
(1) the effect on [the defendant’s] private interest in the accuracy of the trial if the requested service is not provided; (2) the burden on the government’s interest if the service is provided; and (3) the probable value of the additional service and the risk of error in the proceeding if such assistance is not offered.
Rojem,
The first and second prongs of this test are easily satisfied because as the Supreme Court has held, “[t]he private*672 interest in the accuracy of a criminal proceeding that places an individual's life or liberty at risk is almost uniquely compelling,” and although the State’s interest in financial economy may weigh against the provision, of experts to indigent defendants, its “interest in prevailing at trial — unlike that of a private litigant — is necessarily tempered by its interest in the fair and accurate adjudication of criminal cases.”
Johnson v. Gibson,
On direct appeal, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals held that Hawkins had failed to establish any resulting prejudice from his not having an investigator and that the trial court, therefore, had properly denied Hawkins an investigator. See Hawkins,
Evidence presented at an in camera Jackson v. Denno
Hawkins testified during the Jackson v. Denno hearing, however, that, prior to his making these incriminating statements, Sacramento deputies had handcuffed him to the handrails in a jail elevator and beat and kicked him, and stomped on his leg irons, scarring his ankles. According to Hawkins, the Sacramento deputies threatened him with further physical abuse if he refused to cooperate. Hawkins also asserts that, on another occasion, still prior to his confession, Sacramento deputies took him to an abandoned building, where they again beat him.
Oklahoma detectives testified at the Jackson v. Denno hearing that they were not aware of any physical coercion by Sacramento jail officials. Toward the end of their October 1985 interview with Hawkins, the Oklahoma detectives did ask him if any officers had been “mean” to him. Trial tr. vol. IV at 222. Although Hawkins replied, just those over at the Sacramento county jail, see id. at 223,
Immediately after videotaping Hawkins’s statement, however, Oklahoma detectives requested photographs of his tattoos. These photographs depict several body areas where Hawkins asserted Sacramento deputies had injured him, including his ribs and one of his ankles. Contrary to Hawkins’s allegations, these photographs do not show any injuries. Further, immediately prior to transporting him to San Diego, San Diego detectives observed
In addition to hearing this evidence, the trial court viewed Hawkins’s videotaped statement, ruling it was clearly voluntary and that, in fact, Hawkins looked like he was having a good time when making it. See id. at 251-52. The trial judge remarked that he did not know how anyone’s statement “could ever come across ... [more] voluntarily given than that one unless he got up on the church pew or at the altar and gave it there or perhaps at the podium taking the place of a preacher.” Id. at 251.
Hawkins fails to allege what further evidence he could have presented in support of his claim that his custodial statements were coerced, if the trial court had in fact appointed an investigator prior to trial.
D. Reliability of five-year-old witness’s testimony. Hawkins argues that the trial court should have excluded five-year-old Lori Thompson’s testimony. Hawkins asserts that admitting this testimony deprived him of a fair trial, violating the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. The relevant inquiry in a federal habeas proceeding is whether admitting this testimony resulted in a fundamentally unfair trial. See Estelle v. McGuire,
Before the state court, however, Hawkins challenged this testimony only on state-law grounds. See Hawkins,
Hawkins, therefore, has never fairly presented the substance of his federal claim to the state court. See, e.g., Duncan v. Henry,
E. Prosecutorial misconduct. Hawkins asserts that three categories of improper comments made by prosecutors violated the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. See Appellant’s opening br. at 45. Where the alleged misconduct does not implicate a specific constitutional right, Hawkins will be entitled to habeas relief only if the prosecutor’s challenged remark, viewed in light of the trial as a whole, resulted in a fundamentally unfair proceeding. See, e.g., Donnelly v. DeChristo-foro,
Although Hawkins presented these federal claims to the state appellate court, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals specifically addressed only some of these challenged remarks. See Hawkins,
Following this remark, the district attorney continued, asking when would all this end. See Trial tr. vol. VI at 194. Hawkins argues that this comment referenced another abduction, occurring at the same mall only a few weeks before Hawkins’s trial and of which jurors were aware. In fact, the trial court and the attorneys had questioned most jurors individually, during voir dire, about this more recent abduction, clarifying that it did not in any way implicate Hawkins.
It is not at all clear, however, that the prosecutor’s remarks here actually referenced this more recent abduction, rather than the State’s evidence concerning Hawkins’s ongoing violent criminal conduct. Such a remark would have been fair comment on the evidence. Cf., e.g., United States v. Hartsfield,
The district attorney continued, arguing [t]here have been tears in this courtroom. Too many tears by too many people. And it’s time for those tears to stop and the only way those tears are going to stop [is] when those two reach death row. Only then would it stop and as much as I hate putting the burden on you, only you can stop it.
The Oklahoma City Police Department ha[s] done an outstanding job. They’ve brought this evidence over here and I reviewed that evidence and I filed this case and [Assistant District Attorney] Barry Albert and I have put it before you and we’ve had the help of San Diego and Sacramento and Seminole and we’ve done everything we can do. You’ve got to do the rest.
Trial tr. vol. VI at 194.
The state appellate court determined that the prosecutor, with this remark, had “improperly attempted to evoke sympathy and societal alarm,” but the court nevertheless reasonably denied relief. See Hawkins,
2. Prosecutor’s vouching for his witness’s credibilityI Caldwell
Hawkins further argues that this same remark also violated Caldwell,
I know we have put you through an ordeal that’s unbelievable, not only physically but emotionally. And as district attorney of this county I was responsible for the evidence that was put on today, for bringing that evidence here and I know the effect it had on me and I saw the effect it had on you and I sincerely apologize. I would not have done it had I not felt it was ... a necessary part of this trial. Even so, I apologize to each of you.
Trial tr. vol. VI at 189.
“Caldwell precludes improperly diminishing capital jurors’ sense of responsibility for imposing a death sentence. This includes remarks inaccurately describing the jury’s role under state law.” Neill,
Further, during voir dire and second-stage closing argument, prosecutors and defense counsel, in fact, emphasized that it was the jurors’ responsibility to make the capital sentencing decision. See Neill,
3. Referencing other crimes. Evidence at trial indicated that, just before Hawkins abducted Linda Thompson and her children, he had tried to abduct another woman. A mall security guard making his rounds thwarted this earlier abduction attempt. Hawkins challenges the prosecutor’s first-stage opening remark that this woman’s life was spared “by the grace” of a security guard. Trial tr. vol. Ill at 7. This remark, however, did not result in an unfair trial. The trial court later admitted evidence of this attempted abduction, over defense counsel’s objection. See id. vol. V at 7-8. The state appellate court, therefore, reasonably denied relief, holding the trial court had properly admitted this evidence and the prosecutor thus did not err in referring to this evidence during his opening argument. See Hawkins,
Nor did the prosecutor’s reference, during first-stage opening argument, to Hawkins and Shelton as “ex-convicts,” trial tr. vol. Ill at 7, result in a fundamentally unfair trial. Hawkins’s defense attorney had already mentioned numerous times during voir dire that Hawkins had other criminal convictions and had previously served time in prison. See id. vol. I at 263, 266-68, 271-74, 276-77, 306; vol. II at 20, 192, 287, 306, 318, 320.
F. Admission of evidence concerning victim’s personal history and character as a mother. Hawkins asserts that the trial court denied him a fundamentally fair capital trial, contrary to the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments, when it permitted the State to present, during the trial’s first stage, evidence of Linda Thompson’s attributes as a mother and her personal history, and when it later incorporated that evidence into the capital sentencing stage. Specifically, Linda Thompson’s boyfriend testified about Thompson’s concern for her children; her uncle testified that she was a good mother, who did not touch alcohol or smoke during her pregnancies, and kept her children clean and well-nourished; and Thompson’s former husband testified about her concern for her children — for example, she wanted to fence in their yard so the children could play safely, she overreacted at times when the children did not feel well, and she kept her children in a clean environment. In addition, there was testimony that Thompson was a responsible individual, a serious aerobics student and former high school athlete; had graduated from a Minnesota college with a biology degree; and was working as a microbiologist.
Although Hawkins presented the state appellate court with both state- and federal-law challenges to the trial court’s admission of this evidence, the appellate court denied relief, specifically applying only Oklahoma law. See Hawkins,
The federal question here, then, is limited to whether the trial court’s admission of this evidence resulted in a fundamentally unfair proceeding. See Estelle,
G. Admitting evidence of unad-judicated crimes. Hawkins argues the trial court’s admission of evidence of his unadjudicated criminal conduct during the trial’s second stage deprived him of a fair and reliable capital sentencing proceeding, contrary to the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. The trial court permitted the State to present, in support of the continuing threat aggravator, evidence that Hawkins had abducted and sexually
Hawkins now asserts, however, that the Supreme Court’s subsequent decision in Apprendi v. New Jersey,
Hawkins further argues, however, that, despite a first-degree murder conviction, Oklahoma law still does not permit a capital sentencing jury to consider imposing a death sentence unless the State further proves beyond a reasonable doubt the existence of at least one statutory aggravating factor. Assuming Apprendi does further apply to the State’s case in aggravation,
Here, Hawkins essentially argues only that Apprendi further requires the State to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the evidence it presents in support of the continuing threat aggravator. See Appellant’s reply br. at 15-17. This court has previously rejected this argument, however. See, e.g., Smith,
TV. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s denying Hawkins habeas relief.
Notes
. Even if we decided that Hawkins had failed to exhaust his specific federal habeas claim challenging the foreseeability of the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals' decision denying him post-conviction relief, this court, under AEDPA, would remain free to deny relief on such an unexhausted claim. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(2); see also, e.g., Gonzales v. McKune,
. The parties refer to this argument, at times, as an ex post facto claim. Nonetheless, as the parties acknowledge, the argument implicates due process concerns instead, because Hawkins challenges the state appellate court's decision rather than a legislative act. See, e.g., Rogers v. Tennessee,
. McDonald relies upon Bouie,
. Hawkins relies, in part, on Ogelsby,
. Hawkins also asserts that the trial court's denying him an investigator deprived him of the effective representation guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment. See Appellant's opening br. at 30, 35-36. Hawkins, however, never asserted this specific ineffective-assistance claim to any state court and it thus remains unexhausted. Further, the state courts would now deem it procedurally barred. See Coleman,
. The State argued to the district court that Ake is limited to requiring the State to provide psychiatric assistance to an indigent defendant when it is necessary to prepare his defense. Although this court has extended Ake to the State's provision of investigators and other experts as well, see, e.g., Castro v. Ward,
.
. Miranda v. Arizona,
. Even if the trial court had suppressed Hawkins's California custodial statements, there was still significant evidence Hawkins committed these crimes, in light of Pitts’ and Lovell's testimony implicating Hawkins in the abductions and the strong circumstantial evidence indicating Linda Thompson died during the kidnapping.
. The State's failure to argue exhaustion to the district court will not preclude it from doing so now on appeal. See Hale v. Gibson,
. Caldwell,
. Although Hawkins asserts that the trial court's incorporating this evidence into the capital sentencing proceeding violated the Eighth Amendment, he does not make any more specific claim.
. The Supreme Court decided Apprendi after the district court denied Hawkins habeas relief in this case. Nonetheless, the State does not assert any retroactivity problem or other procedural reason that might preclude this court’s considering the merits of Hawkins’s Apprendi argument. We therefore go directly to this argument’s merit. See, e.g., Clayton v. Gibson,
. But see Kinder v. Bowersox,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
Because the majority correctly concludes that Hawkins’ claim of ineffective assistance of counsel is procedurally barred, I join the opinion of the court. If relief from procedural proscription is to be afforded to this defendant, such relief must come from higher authority.
I
Before the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals (“OCCA”), Hawkins argued that “by acquiescing to his demand trial counsel denied him effective assistance, and that by allowing trial counsel to present nothing the trial court allowed him to commit ‘state sanctioned suicide.’ ” Hawkins v. State,
Had Hawkins pursued a fundamental miscarriage of justice argument, it is unlikely that it would have succeeded because a petitioner must demonstrate that “a constitutional violation has probably resulted in the conviction of one who is actually innocent.” Murray v. Carrier,
II
Defendants have a constitutionally protected right to present mitigating evidence during the sentencing phase of a capital case. Williams v. Taylor,
Consideration of mitigating factors allows a jury to make an individualized sentencing determination based upon the defendant’s specific life experiences and characteristics. Battenfield,
Ill
Hawkins contends that his trial counsel did not investigate mitigating evidence or
The Sixth Amendment requires counsel “to make reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations unnecessary.” Strickland v. Washington,
This Court has used the following factors to examine an ineffective assistance of counsel claim based on counsel’s failure to prepare or present any mitigating evidence during the penalty phase of a capital trial after the defendant instructed counsel not to present any mitigating evidence: (1) investigative efforts of defense counsel pri- or to the beginning of the penalty phase, (2) counsel’s penalty phase strategy, (3) advice rendered to defendant prior to defendant’s alleged decision to waive the presentation of mitigating evidence, and (4) trial court’s examination of defendant regarding his alleged waiver. Id. at 1227.
Without investigating possible mitigating evidence, counsel will not be able to make a reasonable tactical choice not to present mitigating evidence. Absent investigation, counsel will also be unable to adequately advise a defendant to knowingly and intelligently waive his right to present mitigating evidence. See Blanco v. Singletary,
When the state contends that a capital defendant waived the presentation of mitigating evidence, an appellate court must be especially watchful before crediting the allegation. We must ensure that defendant was informed that he has a right to present mitigating evidence; that defendant was apprised of the nature, role, and importance of mitigating evidence; and that counsel undertook an investigation to discover mitigating evidence, or else explained to the defendant why such investigation did not take place. See, e.g., Wallace v. Ward,
Interestingly, sometime after Hawkins’ conviction, the OCCA established formal guidelines for trial courts to follow “when a defendant refuses to allow the presentation of mitigating evidence in the sentencing stage.” Wallace v. State,
In keeping with our prior holdings, I would conclude that, as a constitutional minimum, failing to interview family members and acquaintances regarding possible mitigating aspects of a defendant’s background would be a violation of counsel’s duty to investigate because such investigation is almost always necessary in a capital case. See, e.g., Battenfield,
Absent an evidentiary hearing, it is practically impossible to determine the extent of trial counsel’s investigation regarding potential mitigation evidence in the present case. We do, however, have two affidavits from Hawkins’ siblings, both of
. Based on the evidence presented at the state evidentiary hearing in Battenfield, we concluded that "there is no indication [counsel] ever explained the general meaning of mitigation evidence to [defendant] or what specific mitigation evidence was available,” and that "[counsel's] failure to investigate clearly affected his ability to competently advise [defendant] regarding the meaning of mitigation evidence and the availability of possible mitigation strategies.” Id. at 1229. Consequently, counsel’s performance was deficient and "culminated in [defendant] waiving the right to present mitigating evidence,” id. at 1230, resulting in a waiver that' was neither knowing nor intelligent, id. at 1233.
