Jоe Leonard Lambright (“Lambright”) appeals the district court’s procedural dismissal of his ineffective assistance of counsel claim. We conclude that the district court incorrectly found that the state court’s order dismissing Lambright’s claim rested on an independent and adequate state ground. Because he has presented a colorable claim to relief and has not received a hearing, we order an evidentiary hearing in the district court.
I.
On March 30, 1982, Lambright and co-defendant Robert Douglas Smith were convicted of first degree murder, sexual assault, and kidnapping. 1 Lambright’s former girlfriend and accomplice, Kathy Foreman (“Foreman”), agreed to testify as the State’s main witness pursuant to an immunity agreement. The State sought the death penalty.
The mitigation that Lambright’s lawyer offered at sentencing comprises less than three pages of a double-spaced transcript. Although there were signs at the time that Lambright suffered from а mental illness, his counsel failed to present any mitigating psychiatric testimony. Instead, the attorney promised the court that he had “one witness who will be very brief.” He then called a correction officer from the Pima County Jail, who had known Lambright for just six months. The officer testified that he personally had no “problems with him as an inmate” and knew of no “complaints made by other inmates.” When *1203 the lawyer finished questioning the detention officer, he turned to the court and announced, “[y]our Honor, we have nothing more to put forward at this time. Thank you.”
In his closing argument, Lambright’s lawyer offered two reasons for sparing his client from execution. First, in the lawyer’s words, Foreman “was a co-defendant and co-conspirator in everything but the charge made by the county attorney. I think it’s a circumstances [sic] this Court has to consider.” Second, as the lawyer explained, “I submit there is a prior forgery or some such crime in Louisiana sometime ago. The record presented shows a man, but for this instance, with no violent background.”
On the day of sentencing, the court offered Lambright’s lawyer another opportunity to argue on his client’s behalf. The lawyer responded, “I made the argument at the mitigation hearing held prior to this date. Thank-you.” The court then sentenced Lambright to death after finding the existence of a single aggravating factor: that the murder had been committed in an especially heinous, cruel, or depraved manner.
II.
Lambright raised an ineffective assistance of counsel claim in his first petition for postconviction relief. The district court held that he had procedurally defaulted the claim under Arizona Rule of Criminal Procedure 32.2 (“Rule 32.2”) by failing to raise it on direct appeal. We conclude that the rule requiring Lam-bright to raise his ineffective assistance of counsel claim on appeal does not bar federal habeas review because it was “so unсlear that it d[id] not provide the habeas petitioner with a fair opportunity to seek relief in state court.”
Morales v. Calderon,
“In order to constitute adequate and independent grounds sufficient to support a finding of procedural default, a state rule must be
clear,
consistently applied, and
well-established
at the time of petitioner’s purported default.”
Wells v. Maass,
The State relies on
State v. Zuck,
Significantly, the Arizona Supreme Court has since clarified that “[ajs a general rule, ineffective assistance of counsel claims should be raised in post-conviction relief proceedings pursuant to rule 32, Arizona Rules of Criminal Procedure.”
State
*1204
v. Atwood, 171 Ariz.
576,
To prove that Lambright defaulted his Sixth Amendment claim by failing to raise it on appeal, the State alternatively relies on Rule 32.2’s general procedural default rule.
3
At the time of Lambright’s alleged default, Rule 32.2 provided that “any ground” “[k]nowingly, voluntarily and intelligently not raised at trial, on appeal, or in any previous collateral proceeding” could be considered waived. It was well-established, however, that an appellant could not raise any issue outside of the trial record. See
State v. Pearson,
Rule 32 has as its aim the establishment of proceedings to determine the facts underlying a defendant’s claim for relief when such facts are not otherwise available .... When Rule 32.2 is viewed with this aim in mind, we are of the opinion that the preclusion of post-conviction relief under this rule on the ground that the matter is still raisable on direct appeal applies only to those matters in which a sufficient factual basis exists in the record for the appellate court to resolve the matter.
State v. Bell,
In his first Rule 32 petition, Lambright alleged that his attorney failed to investigate or present evidence of his mental disability and social history. Of course, neither the evidence of counsel’s deficiencies nor of the prejudice caused therefrom appeared in the trial record. Since Lam-bright’s ineffective assistanсe of counsel claim required factual development, Rule 32.2 did not clearly require that he raise it on appeal. In fact, Arizona’s procedural rules required that he wait until state post-conviction proceedings to raise it. Thus, the procedural default in this case is inadequate to bar federal review.
See McGregor v. Gibson,
Moreover, even if such a procedural rule clearly existed at the time of Lambright’s direct appeal, the state court’s order in this case does not “clearly and expressly” rest on such a rule. Thus, the Arizona court did not rely on an independent state ground so as to bar federal habeas review. The district court incorrectly based its conclusion that it could not consider Lambright’s constitutional claim on the state court’s first, rather than last, reasoned opinion on Lambiight’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim. To determine whether a state procedural ruling bar's federal review, we look to the “last reasoned opinion on the claim.”
Ylst v. Nunnemaker,
The last reasoned opinion on Lam-bright’s Sixth Amendment claim is the state trial court’s order denying rehearing on his first state post-conviction petition. In the order, the court wrote:
Ineffective assistance of counsel.
Paragraph a-this issue existed factually prior to appeal; the Arizona Supreme Court looked at the entire sentencing process exhaustively, testing it for error of constitutional dimensions and found none. There is therefore the suggestion, and strong inference, that this claim is precluded under Rule 32.2(a)(2); however, it [sic] not, the Court finds that since it clearly could have been raised on direct appeal, that it has been knowingly, voluntarily and intelligently waived by failure to raise it, and is therefore precluded pursuant to Rule 32(a)(c) and (c).
By stating that there was a “strong inference” that the claim was “precluded” under Rule 32.2(a)(2), the state court indicated that it believed that the Arizona Supreme Court had already rejected it on the merits, which prevented Lambright from further litigating the claim. 5 In the next part of the order, however, the court suggested a contradictory possibility: that Lambright had failed to raise the claim before and had therefore waived it under Rule 32.2(a)(3).
The last reasoned opinion on Lam-bright’s ineffective assistance of counsel did not clearly invoke a procedural default rule and therefore does not bar federal review.. It is well established that “a procedurаl default does not bar consideration of a federal claim on either direct or habe-as review unless the last state court rendering a judgment in the case clearly and expressly states that its judgment rests on a state procedural bar.”
Harris v. Reed,
In
Ceja v. Stewart,
The order in this case similarly does not bar federal review. Like the order in Ceja, the state court’s ruling in Lam-bright’s case contains mixed and inconsistent findings of preclusion and waiver. By invoking two contradictory arguments, the state court failed to make a clear finding of procedural default and federal review is not barred.
Because the state court in this case did not clearly and expressly invoke a procedural bar as the basis of its ruling, the State’s reliance on
Poland v. Stewart,
III.
Lambright asserts that he is entitled to an evidentiary hearing because he has raised a colorable claim of ineffective assistance of counsel and no state court has ever granted him an opportunity to develop his claim. We agree and therefore remand to the district court.
See Siripongs v. Calderon,
To ultimately prevail on his ineffective assistance of counsel claim, Lam-bright must show that his counsel’s performanсe was deficient, and that the deficient performance prejudiced him.
Strickland v. Washington,
Lambright argues that an extensive series of “red flags” should have motivated counsel to investigate his psychiatric eondi
*1207
tion and to present mitigating psychiatric testimony at sentencing. Lambright’s presentenсe Psychological Evaluation told of his service in Vietnam, during which he witnessed the violent death of friends, and the mental breakdown that he suffered after returning to this country. It described some of the hallucinations he had experienced and his subsequent need for hospitalization in a mental facility. The report also mentioned two of Lambright’s attempts to commit suicide. In an affidavit before the district court, moreover, Lambright wrote that he had “discussed his past mental рroblems and drug use with his trial counsel.” There can be no doubt that Lambright has raised a color-able claim of deficient performance. Counsel’s alleged failure to obtain a psychiatric evaluation of Lambright, despite knowing of his wartime experience and extensive drug abuse, is the type of performance courts have labeled deficient under
Strickland. See Williams,
We have also held that the failure to interview family members, in light of indications of a mental disorder, constitutes deficient performance.
See Seidel,
Psychiatric evaluations of Lambright after the court imposed the death penalty indicates the seriousness of his trial counsel’s alleged failure to conduct reasonable investigations. Before the district court, Lambright introduced the affidavit of Dr. Donald Stonefeld, a medical doctor specializing in psychiatry with a sub-specialty in neurology and post traumatic stress disorder. After reviewing Lambright’s history, Dr. Stonefeld concluded that “an emotional illness did exist at the time of the offense,” and that the documents he reviewed “indicate post-traumatic stress disorder and a probable disorder due to excessive drug use.” He also recommended “[t]hat a full mental examination of Mr. Lambright is neсessary and warranted in order to determine his mental condition at the time of the offense.” In addition, Lambright introduced the affidavit of a pharmacologist, Martha Fankhauser, who concluded that “chronic amphetamine use such as is reported by Mr. Lambright may cause long-term psychiatric changes including anxiety reactions [and] psychosis.” Like Dr. Sto-nefeld, she recommended that “a psychiatric evaluation of Mr. Lambright is desirable and necessary in order tо determine if *1208 there is an underlying psychiatric disorder which may have been brought on by the ingestion of these substances.” Lambright has presented more than enough evidence to establish a colorable claim of deficient performance.
We have no doubt that Lambright also has a colorable claim of prejudice under
Strickland.
Lambright’s lawyer presented no psychiatric evidence or argument at the sentencing hearing. The evidence Lambright has presеnted, without the benefit of a hearing, shows that his lawyer could have presented extensive mitigating evidence at sentencing. Instead, Lam-bright’s counsel stated meekly, “I have one witness who will be very brief.” The witness was a correction officer who testified as to Lambright’s conduct during a six-month period while he awaited trial. We have previously found that fhe prejudice requirement is met where “defense counsel effectively presented no mitigating evidence at sentencing, despite the presence of aggravating factors.”
Smith,
IV.
We reverse the judgment of the district court and remand for an evidentiary hearing. We remand for the district court to determine whether Lambright was denied effective assistance of counsel at sentencing because of the failure to investigate and present evidence of his psychiatric condition and social history.
Concurrently herewith we file a memorandum disposition in which we affirm the petitioner’s conviction and the district court’s ruling that the especially heinous, atrocious, and cruel aggravating factor applies in this case for the reasons stated therein. Accordingly, the judgment below is
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this oрinion.
Notes
. Because we described the facts of the offense in detail in our en banc opinion, we do not repeat them.
See Lambright v. Stewart,
. The State also relies on cases that the Arizona Supreme Court decided after Lam-bright’s appeal. Obviously, these cases are not relevant in determining whether the rule the State claims existed was sufficiently clear or well-established at the time of Lambright’s alleged default to bar federal review.
. In
Poland v. Stewart,
. Because the rule that the district court applied in this case was insufficiently clear to bar federal review, we need not determine whether a state procedural rule requiring a habeas petitioner to raise an ineffectiveness claim on appeal, which at the same time precludes him from referring to evidence outside of the record to make the necessary showing under Strickland, violates the Due Process Clause.
. As quoted above, Arizona’s waiver or procedural default rule is set forth in Rule 32.2(a)(3), which provides that, “[a] petitioner will not be given relief under this rule based upon any ground: ... (3) knowingly, voluntarily, and intelligently not raised at trial, on appeal, or in any previous collateral proceeding.” By contrast, Rule 32.2(a)(2) sets forth Arizona’s preclusion doctrine by providing that “[a] defendant shall be precluded from relief under this rule based upon any ground” "[flinally adjudicated on the merits on appeal or in any previous collateral proceeding.” Ariz. R.Crim. Pro. 32.2(a)(2) (emphasis added).
. Our examination of the earlier state court order was consistent with the Supreme Court's instruction in
Ylst,
