Petitioner Johnny Paul Witt appeals from an order of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida, Tampa Division, dated March 1, 1985, denying his petition for writ of habeas corpus and motion for stay of execution, and denying his application for certificate of probable cause to appeal to this Court.
The district court’s denial of the petition for writ of habeas corpus was based on the conclusion that both claims Witt presents (ineffective assistance of counsel at sentencing and the
Grigsby
version of the
*1397
Witherspoon
claim) constituted an abuse of the writ.
Witherspoon v. Illinois,
Petitioner was convicted and sentenced to death on February 21, 1974. The Florida Supreme Court affirmed on direct review.
Witt v. State,
When the State alleges, as they do in the instant case, an abuse of the writ of habeas corpus, it places the burden on the petitioner to rebut the State’s contention in one of several ways:
(a) If the ground was previously addressed in a federal habeas corpus proceeding, the petitioner must demonstrate that the decision was not on the merits or the ends of justice would be served by reconsideration of the merits. The “ends of justice” are defined by objective factors, such as whether there was a full and fair hearing on the original petition or whether there was an intervening change in the facts of the case or the applicable law.
(b) If the ground was not previously presented in a federal habeas corpus proceeding, petitioner must demonstrate the failure to present the ground in the prior proceeding was neither the result of an intentional abandonment or withholding nor the product of inexcusable neglect.
See Sanders v. United States,
The first claim petitioner makes relates to ineffective assistance of counsel. Petitioner alleges his counsel failed to investigate and elicit psychological evidence at sentencing that would have shown petitioner to be suffering from organic brain disease. The evidence, counsel contends, should have been presented as mitigating evidence. Fla.Stat. § 921.141(6)(b) and (f). The district court assumed that no such claim was raised in the prior federal proceeding but went on to find that there was no adequate justification for failure to elicit until February 1985 the evidence that petitioner’s present counsel secured in the form of a letter report from a clinical psychologist. The conclusion of the district court appears to us to be correct. To explain why this claim was not raised in petitioner’s first habeas corpus proceeding, it would not be sufficient for petitioner merely to answer that the psychological evidence was not available in 1981, because the record is clear that it was within petitioner’s power to elicit such evidence in 1981. As the district court observed, the record reflects no policy in the public defender’s office which would have prevented petitioner’s attorneys from raising an ineffective assistance claim against petitioner’s trial counsel. From an examination of the record, it appears there was also no policy which would have prevented petitioner’s attorneys from eliciting the psychological evi *1398 dence necessary to support that claim. The burden is on petitioner to demonstrate that the failure of his counsel at the first habeas corpus proceeding, who are attorneys from the same public defender’s office which is presently representing petitioner, to elicit the necessary evidence and raise this claim was not due to “inexcusable neglect.” The showing presently made by petitioner reflects nothing to show why this evidence was not discovered and presented in the prior proceeding.
Petitioner’s second argument is based upon a
Grigsby
variation of the
Witherspoon
claim. The record indicates that the district court proceeded on the basis that the
Grigsby
claim was actually addressed by the Supreme Court in its opinion on the first habeas corpus petition in this case.
Wainwright v. Witt,
— U.S. -,
Therefore, it is clear that the Grigsby version of the Witherspoon claim now being presented in this successive petition is a claim that had been raised long before the Grigsby case and the petitioner’s failure to present such a claim in his first petition is necessarily attributable to abandonment or inexcusable neglect. Thus, we find the presentation of this claim is also an abuse of the writ.
In addition to the above analysis, we have reviewed petitioner’s claims and the record to see if either claim should have been considered in the manifest interest of justice. In our view, neither claim presents any “substantial ground upon which relief might be granted.”
Barefoot v. Estelle,
The application for certificate of probable cause to appeal is DENIED, and the emergency motion for stay of execution is DENIED.
