We consider the circumstances in which a criminal defendant is entitled to a hearing to determine his competency to stand trial.
I
James Richard Odie was tried and convicted in 1983 of two first degree murders and sentenced to death. He unsuccessfully exhausted his state court remedies and filed a federal habeas petition raising fifty-six claims. After protracted proceedings, the district court denied all relief in 1999, 1 and Odie appeals.
Odie filed his habeas petition before the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) went into effect on April 24, 1996, and so AEDPA does not apply to the merits of this appeal. However, he is subject to AEDPA’s procedural requirement that he obtain a Certificate of Appealability (COA).
See Slack v. McDaniel,
*1087
Odie raises nine claims before us. To make a “substantial showing,” he must demonstrate that “reasonable jurists could debate whether ... the petition should have been resolved in a different manner or that the issues presented were adequate to deserve encouragement to proceed.”
Slack,
II
A defendant may not be criminally prosecuted while he is incompetent, and the state must give him access to procedures for determining his competency.
See Medina v. California,
We review the record to determine whether evidence before the state trial court raised a “bona fide doubt” that Odie was competent to stand trial.
See Pate,
Odle’s mental troubles started in 1973 when he suffered severe trauma to his brain as a result of a car accident. A surgeon performed a temporal lobe lobectomy, removing a 3 x 3 x 4 inch piece of his brain. The surgery left just a flap of skin to cover the opening in his skull, and only when Odie complained thirteen months later that his brain was pulsating beneath the skin, did the surgeon insert a plastic plate to close the opening. Doctors, family and friends testified that this experience left Odie “a different guy,” one who appeared to be mentally unstable and out of control.
Family members and employers further testified that the Odie they knew before the accident and the man he became after-wards were like “night and day.” He changed from a man who did not miss “a day he was supposed to work” to one who was “more like ... half of a person.” He seemed confused and talked slowly, like a *1088 child; he had trouble controlling his impulses and often acted bizarrely and wildly. He would get a “hot look in his eye like a junk-yard dog” and would “beat his head against the wall.”
Mental health records and expert witnesses offered an explanation for the erratic behavior and personality change that Odle’s family and friends had observed: Odie may never have recovered from the severe trauma he suffered in the car accident. While county health records revealed no mental disturbances or mental health visits prior to the accident, Odie was involuntarily committed to a psychiatric ward three times in as many years following the accident. The first time, he was hospitalized after taking twelve Tylenol tablets. “[F]or the greater part of his [nine day] hospital stay,” Odie acted “combative, assaultive, agitated [and] disoriented,” and a nurse found him pounding his head against the wall. Doctors diagnosed him as suffering from “acute brain syndrome.” Later that year, the same day he was discharged from the surgery to close his skull, Odie was committed a second time. He “had become violent, he threatened himself [and] others.” As another doctor described it, “he seemed to have little control over these outbreaks.”
As Odie went in and out of the psychiatric ward, doctors prescribed him different medications, including tranquilizers and antidepressants. But nothing altered his erratic, out-of-control behavior. Two years later, he was committed again, after someone found him prowling around a stranger’s backyard, “incoherent,” “reliving combat or war somewhere,” “confused” and “hallucinating.” This pattern ended only when he went to prison in 1976. While there, he slashed his wrists in an attempted suicide. After he was released at the end of 1979, his family believed that he continued to “go downhill” and was not acting “in his right mind.”
The trial judge had before him a comprehensive record of this history and heard the testimony of expert witnesses who described the extensive damage to Odle’s brain. Doctors testified that Odie probably suffered from an organic brain disorder, which causes “defects in the way [a person] functions intellectually, socially, and emotionally.” One psychiatrist asserted generally that severe head injuries like the one Odie suffered could cause seizure disorders affecting behavior for a prolonged period of time. Another doctor had administered an electroencephalogram in 1982, before trial, which revealed brain abnormalities consistent with an epileptic seizure disorder. He testified that Odle’s brain injury would probably cause behavioral disturbances beyond his control. This diagnosis was consistent with Odle’s complaints, documented during his hospitalizations, that he often felt unable to control his impulses.
The State argues that this evidence of mental impairment is irrelevant because Odie appeared calm in the courtroom. But calm behavior in the courtroom is not necessarily inconsistent with mental incompetence. Some forms of incompetence manifest themselves through erratic behavior, others do not. Odle’s behavior in the courtroom does not refute the large body of clinical evidence which tended to cast doubt on his competence.
Moreover, records from the county jail suggest that this calm masked continuing mental impairment. Less than a year before the trial began, prison officials found Odie lying face down in his jail cell, apparently unconscious. Odie had attempted to commit suicide by setting fire to his cell. The prison’s mental health staff diagnosed this as a brief psychotic episode and, given his history of depression and past suicide attempts, placed him in a suicide observation room for several weeks.
The State also relies on the fact that Odle’s own lawyer did not question his competence at the time of trial. It is true that “defense counsel will often have the best-informed view of the defendant’s ability to participate in his defense.”
Medina,
We do not dismiss lightly the fact that no one questioned Odle’s competence over the course of two years of pre-trial proceedings and twenty-eight days of trial.
See Hernandez v. Ylst,
None of this establishes that Odie was incompetent to stand trial. But we believe a reasonable jurist, given the information available, would have developed doubts on this score. After all, competence to stand trial does not consist merely of passively observing the proceedings. Rather, it requires the mental acuity to see, hear and digest the evidence, and the ability to communicate with counsel in helping prepare an effective defense.
See Dusky,
The state court can nonetheless cure its failure to hold a competency hearing at the time of trial by conducting one retroactively. We have said that retrospective competency hearings may be held when the record contains sufficient information upon which to base a reasonable psychiatric judgment.
See De Kaplany,
*1090
We therefore remand the case to district court with instructions to grant the writ unless the state trial court conducts a hearing within sixty days to determine whether Odle was competent at the time he stood trial.
See Miles,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The district court first denied Odle’s original petition, see
Odle v. Vasquez,
. The district court granted Odle’s request for a Certificate of Probable Cause (CPC) on October 4, 1999. A CPC, unlike a COA, permits an appeal as to the denial of the entire petition rather than specific issues as required by 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(3).
. The district court denied all fifty-six claims that Odie brought in his habeas petition. Odie raises only nine of those claims on appeal and so has abandoned the other forty-seven. See Morris, 229 F.3d at 779.
. Odie has not made a "substantial showing that he was denied a constitutional right” with respect to the following four claims: (1) whether his attorney's stipulation to a disputed issue of fact regarding ballistics denied him effective assistance of counsel; (2) whether the state knowingly presented false testimony by an expert witness that denied him due process; (3) whether the state's failure to disclose information about an expert witness's potential bias denied him due process; and (4) whether cumulative errors denied him a fundamentally fair trial. We therefore decline to issue a COA as to each of them.
. A petitioner who may be incompetent cannot “knowingly or intelligently 'waive' his right to have the court determine his capacity to stand trial,”
Pate,
. In a declaration submitted to the state supreme court, Odle’s trial lawyer explains Odle's calmness in the courtroom as a strategy for controlling his behavior during trial proceedings. See Deck of William E. Gagen, Jr. (dated Apr. 3, 1992), Petitioner’s Ex. 34, Reply to Opposition to Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus, In re Odle, No. S022451 (Cal. Sept. 16, 1992). Because the lawyer was concerned "about the potential for [Odie] to explode irrationally in court,” the lawyer “encouraged him to block out the proceedings whenever they began to agitate him.” He coached Odie to "stare at a particular object or objects in the courtroom, such as a coffee cup or sign, so that he could simply focus on those to the exclusion of events in the courtroom that might disturb him.” Id. at 6. While this evidence was not available to the state trial judge, it illustrates the danger of relying on calm behavior in the courtroom as a guide to mental competence.
. If the state trial court concludes that it is unable to conduct a retrospective competency hearing, then the conviction must be set aside.
