Jоseph R. Spaziano appeals from the district court’s denial of the 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition involving his conviction and death sentence in Florida for the murder of Laura Harberts.
I. PRIOR PROCEEDINGS
The long and tortuous procedural history of this case began nineteen years ago. Although the murder had occurred two years earlier, Spaziano was indicted for it in 1975. The next year he was tried, convicted, and sentenced to death in the Circuit Court of Seminole County, Florida. In his initial direct appeal, Spaziano raised six issues, none of which he is pursuing here. The Florida Supreme Court affirmed the murder conviction but remanded the case for further sentence proceedings before the trial judge.
Spaziano v. Florida,
On remand, the triаl judge corrected his prior errors and resentenced Spaziano to death. On direct appeal from that reimposition of the death sentence, Spaziano raised five new issues, all of which the Florida Supreme Court held to be without merit.
See Spaziano v. State,
Spaziano then filed a series of four motions pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850 and two petitions for a state writ of habeas corpus, all of which were unsuccessful. Those proceedings and the issues they involved are reflected in the following decisions:
Spaziano v. State,
After having spent fifteen years attacking his conviсtion and death sentence on direct appeal and in collateral proceedings in the state courts, Spaziano began federal habeas review proceedings. In November of 1991, he filed in the district court a multivolume, three-hundred-and-seventy-six page 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition. 2 That petition raised twenty-three claims, all of which the district court eventually denied. 3 In his appeal from that denial, Spaziano has abandoned most of the claims he raised in the district court. We will address only those claims he has argued before us.
II. DISCUSSION
A. THE HITCHCOCK CLAIM
1. The Claim Involving the Sentencing Judge
Spaziano claims that he was sentenced in violation of
Hitchcock v. Dugger,
The district court found that at the time of the initial sentence proceeding the trial judge believed that the Florida sentencing statute, which explicitly limited the trial court’s consideration of mitigating circumstances to those enumerated in the statute, precluded consideration of nonstatutory mitigating circumstances. However, the first death sentence imposed on Spaziano was vacated and the case remanded for resentencing. Spaziano was resentenced, and what matters is what the trial judge thought and did at that resentence proceeding, not at initial sentencing. The district court found that at the resentence proceeding, which occurred five years after the initial sentencing, the trial judge knew that he was bound to consider, and did actually consider, the non-statutory mitigating circumstance evidence. Because that is a finding of historical fact— what the judge knew and what he did — we review the finding under the deferential clearly erroneous standard, which the Supreme Court has defined as follows:
If the district court’s account of the evidence is plausible in light of the record viewed in its entirety, the court of appeals may not reverse it even though convinced that had it been sitting as the trier of fact, it would have weighed the evidence differently. Where there are two permissible views of the evidence, the factfinder’s choice between them cannot be clearly erroneous.
Anderson v. City of Bessemer City, N.C.,
In determining what the sentencing judge believed about whether nonstatutory mitigating circumstances could and should be considеred, there is good reason to distinguish, as the district court did, between the initial sentence proceedings and the resentence proceedings which occurred on remand. The initial sentence proceedings occurred in 1976, two years before the decision in
Lockett v. Ohio,
*1033
Even though resentencing in this case occurred after
Lockett,
Spaziano argues that the trial judge was prevented by Florida law from expanding the resentenee proceedings on remand to include anything beyond allowing Spaziano to respond to the presentenee investigation report (“PSI”) in order to cure the
Gardner
error. In support of that argument, Spaziano cites three Florida decisions that, in his words, “seemed to limit a
Gardner
remand hearing to rebutting the PSI”:
Songer v. State,
Harvard v. State,
After the Florida Supreme Court remanded this case, and before the resentenee hearing was held, Judge McGregor ordered a new, updated presentence investigation report. He did not rely on, or even consider, the old report. Before the actual resentenee hearing was conducted on May 28,1981, both sides filed a number of motions relating to the resentenee hearing, and those motions were argued and decided at a May 21 motion hearing. The PSI was given to both sides at the beginning of that hearing.
In response to the prosecution’s notification that it intended to offer new evidence in support of the prior violent felony conviction aggravating circumstance, the defense filed a motion in limine seeking to prevent the state from introducing any evidence at the resen-tenee hearing. In that motion and at the May 21, 1981 motion hearing, the defеnse
*1034
argued that the sole purpose of the remand was to afford the defense an opportunity to rebut any information in the presentence investigation report. In arguing that motion, defense counsel cited some prior
Gardner
remand decisions of the Florida Supreme Court, including
Funchess v. State,
The next matter taken up at the May 21, 1981, motion hearing was another motion in limine by the defense which sought to prevent the court from considering in support of an aggravating circumstance any previous conviction which had not been presented to the advisory jury. While arguing that motion, defense counsel stated: “In 1976, everyone was under the assumption that we were limited to statute, with respect to mitigation. Since that time, it’s been found not to be the case. In fact, there are factors which should be considered.” Neither the court nor the prosecutor took exception to that statement.
After disposing of the defense motions, Judge McGregor took up the prosecution’s four motions, two of which are relevant to the present issue. The prosecutor had filed a motion to determine the nature of the proceedings, which he characterized as simply an attempt to get some guidance about how the sentence hearing would be conducted. In discussing that motion, Judge McGre-gor told defense counsel that introducing nonstatutory mitigating circumstances could open the door to rebuttal evidence from the prosecution. Defense counsel acknowledged that, but said the nonstatutory mitigating factor the defense intended to rely upon was residual doubt, which would not require the introduction of any evidence.
The motion hearing also involved another prosecution motion, which sought to compel the defense to provide a statement of particulars as to the nonstatutory mitigating circumstance factors it intended to rely upon at the resentence hearing. That written motion acknowledged that: “[C]ase law establishes ... [t]he Defendant is not limited in his mitigating factors to those specified by Statute.” In discussing the motion, the prosecutor explained that it was filed, “[bjecause there’s a big word [world?] out there that the Defendant is entitled to avail himself of, especially after Lockett versus Ohio, which says, he’s not bound by the ones that are listed by the legislature^] so that we can be prepared.” Defense counsel responded that the nonstatutory mitigating circumstances that they were contemplating relying upon were evidence of the defendant’s good record in prison over the last five years, which would be proven by documents and testimony, and also the existence of residual doubt, which would be argued based on the trial record. In response to the state’s continuing insistence that the defense provide further particulars about the nonstatutory mitigating circumstances it intended to rely upon, Judge McGregor expressed the opinion that under Lockett the defense was entitled to bring forth additional nonstatutory mitigating circumstances and told the prosecutor that, “I don’t think, in view of Lockett, I can put a straightjacket on [defense counsel] here.” The prosecutor explained that he was not trying to limit the defense but wanted notice *1035 of what was going to be presented, to which Judge McGregor responded that the discussions that had occurred provided sufficient notice, and he refused to require the defense to file a written statement spelling out the nonstatutory mitigating circumstances it would rely upon.
At the actual resentence hearing, which was conducted on May 28, 1981, Judge McGregor made statements indicating that he understood that the defense was to be given an opportunity to rebut by evidence and argument matters contained in the PSI, and that “[t]he information by way of the defendant’s background is whatever you may present to me or whatever I heard earlier plus what’s contained in this PSI.” The prosecutor presented new evidence in support of the prior violent felony conviction aggravating circumstance. The defense was given an opportunity to present evidence, but it presented none. Defense counsel argued as nonstatutory mitigating circumstances residual doubt and the fact that there was no evidence that Spaziano had misbehaved since he had been in prison.
On June 4, 1981, Judge McGregor issued his new sentence order. The order itself indicates that the purpose of the resentence hearing was to afford Spaziano an opportunity to present evidence in response to the PSI, and other evidence as well. The order states that the defendant was “offered the opportunity to present any evidence he might have and to respond to the PSI Report.” The order goes on to say that the court had considered the new PSI report as well as the arguments of counsel, and that the court had weighed the aggravating and mitigating circumstances and found that the mitigating circumstances were insufficient to outweigh the aggravating circumstances.
The resentence order in this case, like the order in
Parker v. Dugger,
The district court did not clearly err in finding that at Spaziano’s resentence proceedings Judge McGregor knew he was bound to consider, and he did actually consider, all nonstatutory mitigating circumstance evidence presented to him. That factfinding is plausible in light of the record viewed in its entirety. At the least, it is one of two permissible views of the evidence, therefore, it cannot be clear error. The factual premise of Spaziano’s Hitchcock claim involving the sentencing judge fails.
2. The Claim Involving Defense Counsel
Spaziano also argues that, irrespective of what the sentencing judge knew or considered,
Hitchcock
error occurred because defense counsel were unaware that they could present nonstatutory mitigating circumstance evidence at the resentence hearing.
See Bolender v. Singletary,
What either or both of his counsel thought in 1976, the year Spaziano was originally sentenced, and two years before the
Lockett
decision, is not the issue. The district court found that there was
Hitchcock
error at Spa-ziano’s initial sentencing in 1976. That is not the question. The question is whether that error was cured by the
post-Lockett
resen-tence proceedings Spaziano was afforded in 1981. Spaziano has pointed to no testimony or statements of Kirkland that he was unaware of
Lockett
and its effect in 1981, when Spaziano was resentenced. In
Bolender v. Singletary,
As for co-counsel Schwarz, Spaziano has proffered an affidavit from him stating that at the 1981 resentenee proceedings he labored under the belief that the defense was limited to presenting evidence in rebuttal of the PSI. Even if we accept the truth of that affidavit, however, it does nothing to establish that co-counsel Kirkland shared that belief. Kirkland did sign an affidavit about his representation of Spaziano in regard to sentencing. Conspicuously absent from that affidavit, however, is any indication that at the 1981 resentenee proceeding Kirkland labored under the belief that Spaziano’s right to present nonstatutory mitigating circumstances evidence was in any way restricted. In his affidavit, Kirkland explains that the reason he did not offer any mitigating circumstance evidence during the initial sentence proceedings in 1976 is that Spaziano forbade it, fearing a loss of standing in the Outlaws motorcycle gang if anything was offered in mitigation, which Spaziano equated with begging for mercy. There is not one hint in Kirkland’s affidavit that at the 1981 resen-tence proceeding he believed that Spaziano’s right to present nonstatutory mitigating circumstance evidence was in any way restricted under the Florida law in existence then or by the trial judge’s beliefs.
In any event, the record of the resentenee proceedings belies the statement in Schwarz’s affidavit that he thought the only nonstatutory mitigating circumstance evidence that he could present was that which rebutted something in the PSI. The record shows that when Spaziano was resentenced, both of his counsel knew that they could introduce into evidence and argue all non-statutory mitigating circumstances applicable to the case. Both of them were aware of the 1978 Lockett decision, which clearly hеld that the Constitution required that defense counsel be permitted to offer any and all nonstat-utory mitigating circumstance evidence. They were also told at the motions hearing, which preceded the resentenee hearing by a week, that nonstatutory mitigating circumstance evidence could be introduced and argued. They were told that by the trial court, and even by the prosecutor. Defense counsel themselves must have known that they could present nonstatutory mitigating circumstance evidence, because at the motion hearing they indicated that that was what they intended to do. In response to the prosecutor’s motion seeking to require defense counsel to specify nonstatutory mitigating circumstances, Schwarz himself said they intended to introduce evidence of Spaziano’s good behavior in prison, a classic nonstatuto-ry mitigating circumstance, and he also said that they would argue residual doubt as another nonstatutory mitigating circumstance.
The record shows that defense counsel pursued a dual strategy during the resen-tence proceedings. In an effort to thwart the prosecutor’s attempt to introduce new evidence of an aggravating circumstance, cоunsel argued that the case had been re *1037 manded for the limited purpose of curing the Gardner error and that the only evidence that could be introduced was evidence to rebut anything in the PSI that was unfavorable to Spaziano. However, when that attempt failed and the court ruled that it was going to open the hearing up to new evidence from the prosecutor, defense counsel changed their tune and argued that the judge could and should consider new nonstatutory mitigating circumstance evidence, such as the evidence of a good prison record. The prosecutor and the trial court agreed.
We reject Spaziano’s contention that defense counsel’s presentation of nonstatutory mitigating circumstance evidence was hampered by their belief that the only such evidence they could introduce was that which rebutted something unfavorable in the PSI. Viewed against the record of the resentence proceedings, such a contention necessarily posits that defense counsel thought that residual doubt and a good prison record rebutted unfavorable information in the PSI, which in turn assumes that counsel knew at that time what was in the PSI. The record conclusively contradicts that essential assumption. The record shows with absolute clarity that at the time defense counsel stated that they intended to rely on those two factors as nonstatutory mitigating circumstances, they had not seen the PSI and did not know what was in it. 4 Therefore, they could not have thought that those two non-statutory factors rebutted anything in the PSI.
Even if we ignore that irrefutable part of the record, however, Spaziano’s argument still will not fly. In order to explain away defense counsel’s assertion of residual doubt and a good prison record as rebuttal to information contained in the PSI, Spaziano posits a definition of rebuttal so broad that it swallows his contention whole. We have read the PSI, and if residual doubt and a good prison record can be described as factors rebutting unfavorable matters in the PSI, any other nonstatutory mitigating circumstance Spazi-ano has belatedly proffered in this proceeding also would have fit within that description.
In summary, the district court did not err in rejecting this claim without an evidentiary hearing for two reasons. First, the record trumps the Schwarz affidavit and conclusively shows that this claim is without merit.
See Bolender,
B. THE PARKER v. DUGGER CLAIM
Parker v. Dugger,
The present case does not fit within the Parker rule. The sentencing judge in this case did not improperly consider any *1038 aggravating circumstances. Both of the aggravating circumstances the judge considered in his sentencing decision were upheld by the Florida Supreme Court. Spaziano II at 510-11. Moreover, Spaziano states in his brief that, “[t]he Florida Supreme Court never concluded that there were no nonstatutory mitigating cirсumstances,” but instead, “[i]t found the opposite.” Nonetheless, Spaziano contends that Parker requires us to set aside his death sentence because the Florida Supreme Court failed, in his view, to explain adequately its decision to uphold the trial judge’s override of the advisory jury recommendation. We do not mean to imply that the Constitution requires such an explanation, but we are satisfied the Florida Supreme Court did provide an adequate explanation for its decision:
We find the facts suggesting that the death sentence be imposed over the jury’s recommendation of life, including the pri- or conviction of a violent felony which the jury did not have an opportunity to consider, meets the clear and convincing test to allow override of the jury’s recommendation in accordance with previous decisions of this Court. Tedder v. State,322 So.2d 908 (Fla.1975).
Spaziano II at 511 (emphasis added). The square peg of this case will not fit into Parser's round hole.
Although Spaziano has gone to great length to disguise his contention as a
Parker
claim, stripped to its essentials the claim is that the Florida Supreme Court erred in its application of the
Tedder
rule.
See Tedder v. State,
It is not our function to decide whether we agree with the advisory jury or with the trial judge and the Supreme Court of Florida. Our review, rather, is limited to ascertaining whether the result of the override scheme is arbitrary or discriminatory.
Lusk v. Dugger,
C. THE INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL CLAIM RELATING TO HYPNOSIS
Spaziano claims that his trial counsel, Edward Kirkland, rendered ineffective assistance of counsel in two respects related to the fact that the State’s key witness, Tony Dilisio, had been hypnotized before trial. Spaziano contends that counsel, who knew that Dilisio had been hypnotized to help refresh his recollection, was ineffective for failing to object to Dilisio being allowed to testify at all, and that even if counsel could not have excluded Dilisio’s testimony he was ineffective for failing to present and develop the hypnosis facts in order to impeach Dilisio before the jury.
Spaziano raised both of these ineffective assistance claims in a timely fashion in his first state collateral proceeding. The state trial court denied them on the merits, a decision affirmed by the Flоrida Supreme Court. Spaziano III at 721. The district court also denied relief on the merits. We agree with the decisions of the Florida courts and the district court that defense counsel did not render ineffective assistance of counsel in relation to the hypnosis matter.
When Spaziano was tried in 1976, no applicable state or federal precedent barred the use of hypnotically refreshed testimony. It was not until nearly a decade after the trial that the Florida Supreme Court held in
Bundy v. State,
As the Florida Supreme Court noted, Spa-ziano’s claim that his counsel was ineffective for failing to object to Dilisio’s hypnotically refreshed testimony amounts to “claiming that his counsel was ineffective for failing to anticipate the [Florida Supreme Court’s]
Bundy
decision.”
Spaziano III
at 721. We have held many times that “Reasonably effective representation cannot and does not include a requirement to make arguments based on predictions of how the law may develop.”
Elledge v. Dugger,
Spaziano’s other ineffective assistance claim relating to hypnosis involves a matter of trial strategy. It is undisputed that defense counsel discovered before trial that Dilisio had been hypnotized, and in a pretrial deposition of Dilisio, counsel developed facts relating to the hypnosis. It is also undisputed that counsel made a strategic decision to keep from the jury the fact of the hypnosis. Indeed, counsel even objected, successfully, when the prosecutor attempted to bring out through Dilisio the fact that he had been hypnotized. Counsel decided to pursue the strategy he did because he had abundant information to use in impeaching Dilisio, and he did not want to risk having the jury think that Dilisio’s testimony was more reliable because it had been hypnotically refreshеd. Spaziano contends that that strategy was unreasonable because, in his view, it would have been better to use the fact that Dilisio had been hypnotized to impeach him even further than counsel did. We agree with the state courts and the district court that counsel’s strategic decision to keep from the jury the evidence of hypnosis was not one of those relatively rare strategic decisions that is outside the wide range of reasonable professional assistance.
The Supreme Court has mandated a highly deferential review of counsel’s conduct, especially where strategy is involved.
Strickland v. Washington,
In order to apply the standards laid down in Supreme Court and Eleventh Circuit precedent, we begin, as the Supreme Court has instructed us to, by “reconstructing] the circumstances of counsel’s challenged conduct, and [evaluating] the conduct from counsel’s perspective at the time.”
Strickland,
466
*1040
U.S. at 689,
Spaziano’s habeas petition and his briefs to this Court are filled with page after page of references to and quotations from letters, reports, and articles supporting his contention that the public perception is wrong, that hypnotically refreshed testimony can be and sometimes is less reliable than unrefreshed testimony.
Cf. Rock,
Given the finite resources of time and money that face a defense attorney, it simply is not realistic to expect counsel to investigate substantially all plausible lines of defense. A reasonably competent attorney often must rely on his own experience and judgment, without the benefit of a substantial investigation, when deciding whether or not to forego a particular line of defense.
The fact that a criminal defense attorney could have conducted a more thorough investigation that might have borne fruit does not establish that that attorney’s performance was outside the wide range of reasonably effective assistance.
See Burger v. Kemp,
In judging the reasonableness of an attorney’s investigation and of the strategic decisions that followed from that investigation, one factor to be considered is the experience of the attorney. We held in
Gates,
Another factor requiring deference to counsel’s judgment call in this case is that, it was a decision based upon his perception of how the jury would react to the evidence of hypnosis. We have held that a defense attorney’s sense of the jury’s reaction to testimony or evidence is a sound basis on which to make strategic decisions.
See Card v. Dugger,
There is further evidence in the record of the reasonableness of counsel’s strategy. In anticipation of the withering cross-examina *1041 tion that Dilisio would be subject to because of his earlier lapses of memory and the inconsistencies between his trial testimony and his earliest statements to police, the prosecutor sought to elicit during direct examination of Dilisio the explanation that his recollection had been refreshed through hypnosis. Defense counsel objected and successfully kept that fact from the jury, thus cutting off the prosecutor’s attempt to minimize the damage to Dilisio’s credibility beсause of the memory lapses and inconsistent statements. Thus, the prosecutor shared defense counsel’s evaluation of the probable impact the facts about hypnosis would have on the jury.
In order to prove that the strategy the defense counsel deliberately pursued in this case was outside the wide range of reasonable professional assistance, Spaziano must establish “that the approach taken by defense counsel would not have been used by professionally competent- counsel.”
Harich v. Dugger,
D. THE SUBSTANTIVE HYPNOSIS CLAIM
In addition to the related ineffective assistance of counsel claim, Spaziano also claims that the use of Dilisio’s hypnotically refreshed testimony violated the Eighth Amendment and the Due Process Clause. The district court denied this claim on the merits. The State argues that the claim is procedurally barred; that it is barred by the nonretroaetivity doctrine of
Teague v. Lane,
Even though the State argued the
Teague
bar in its brief to this Court, Spaziano urges us not to address this defense because the State did not raise it in the district court. The Supreme Court has made it clear that even where the State does not argue the
Teague
bar at all, a federal court has discretion to decide whether the bar should be applied.
Caspari v. Bohlen,
— U.S. -, -,
The
Teague
doctrine bars retroactive application in a 28 U.S.C. § 2254 proceeding of any rule of law which had not been announced at the time the petitioner’s conviction became final. The Supreme Court has directed that “a federal court should apply
Teague
by proceeding in three steps.”
Caspari,
— U.S. at -,
The second step of the
Teague
analysis is determining whether the rule the habeas petitioner seeks or upon which he relies is a new one.
Caspari,
— U.S. at -,
Spaziano has not cited any controlling precedent, and we have found none, in existence on July 2, 1984, that dictated the exclusion of hypnotically refreshed testimony either in general or in the particular circumstances of this case. Indeed, even three years after that date, in the Supreme Court’s view, the state of the law involving the appropriate role of hypnosis was still “unsettled.”
Rock,
The third step in the
Teague
analysis is determining whether either of the two exceptions is applicable.
Caspari,
— U.S. at -,
The second
Teague
exception involves new “ “watershed rules of criminal procedure’ implicating the fundamental fairness and accuracy of the criminal proceeding.”
Caspari,
— U.S. at -,
The Supreme Court has underscored the narrowness of this second exception by using as a prototype the rule of
Gideon v. Wainwright,
A rule barring or curtailing the use of hypnotically refreshed testimony does not fit within this second
Teague
exception. Even assuming, as Spaziano contends, that such a rule would improve accuracy and increase fairness, it fails on the second component of the test. It would not be a “watershed rule” altering our understanding of the “bedrock procedural elements” absolutely essential to a fair trial. In other words, it would laсk “the primacy and centrality” of the
Gideon
prototype. In
Saffle v. Parks,
Spaziano nonetheless argues that the test for the second Teague exception should be whether the new rule increases fairness and improves the accuracy of the factfinding process. In rejecting precisely the same argument in Sawyer v. Smith, the Supreme Court explained:
this test looks only to half of our definition of the second exception. Acceptance of petitioner’s argument would return the second exception to the broad definition that Justice Harlan first proposed in Desist, but later abandoned in Mackey, under which new rules that “significantly improve the pre-existing fact-finding procedures are to be retroactively applied on habeas.” Desist v. United States,394 U.S. 244 , 262,89 S.Ct. 1030 , 1041,22 L.Ed.2d 248 (1969). In Teague, we modified Justice Harlan’s test to combine the accuracy element of the Desist test with the Mackey limitation of the exception to watershed rules of fundamental fairness. It is thus not enough under Teague to say that a new rule is aimed at improving the accuracy of trial. More is required. A rule that qualifies under this exception must not only improve accuracy, but also “alter our understanding of thе bedrock procedural elements ” essential to the fairness of a proceeding. Teague,489 U.S., at 311 ,109 S.Ct., at 1076 (quoting Mackey [v. United States ], 401 U.S. [667] at 693, 91 S.Ct. [1160] at 1180 [28 L.Ed.2d 404 (1971) ]).
*1044 As a final argument on this issue, Spaziano invites us to modify the Teague doctrine by incorporating into it the actual innocence exception from procedural default and abuse of the writ law. Putting aside the question of whether such an exception would have any relevance to this ease, we cannot accept the invitation to “improve” the Supreme Court’s handiwork. We lack the power to modify Supreme Court decisions; our duty is to follow them. Following Teague and its progeny, we affirm the district court’s denial of relief on the substantive hypnosis claim.
E. THE BRADY v. MARYLAND CLAIM
In Spaziano’s fourth state collateral proceeding, he raised for the first time a
Brady v. Maryland,
As to the procedural default of this claim, the district court held that Spaziano had not made the cause and prejudice showing necessary to lift the procedural bar, but the court did not explicitly address the actual innocence exception. The precise contours of that exception as it applies to guilt stage claims is unsettled at the present time.
See Roberts v. Singletary,
Spaziano’s Brady claim consists of four subclaims. The one upon which he primarily relies involves three investigative reports which relate in one way or the other to a “Joe” having called the victim the night she disappeared. The Florida Supreme Court found from the record that: “defense counsel knew about Joe Suarez, knew that he had dated the victim, knew that he had previously faced criminal charges for exposing himself to several women, and knew that he could have been the ‘Joe’ who telephoned the victim the night before the murder.” Spaziano VI at 291. In short, defense counsel knew virtually as much about that subject as the prosecution did. The investigative reports in question do not establish that it was Joe Suarez who made the phone call to the victim the night before she disappeared. In any event, the reports are not admissible evidence, and еven if Spaziano had had them before trial he could not have produced a witness to testify that Suarez had made the phone call. The reports are, to a considerable extent, inferences of an investigator which would not have been admissible. Spa-ziano concedes that at the time of trial Suarez was nowhere to be found.
Even where there is suppression, a new trial is required only where the suppressed evidence is material, and “[t]he evidence is material only if there is a reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
United States v. Bagley,
F. THE ESPECIALLY HEINOUS, ATROCIOUS OR CRUEL AGGRAVATING CIRCUMSTANCE ISSUE
One of the two aggravating circumstances upon which Spaziano’s death sen
*1045
tence is based is the “especially heinous, atrocious or cruel” factor. The constitutionality of that factor was upheld in
Proffitt v. Florida,
In the resentence order the trial court entered the following factfindings and legal conclusions:
In respect to whether the capital felony committed in this case was committed in such a manner as to bring it within the category of being “especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel”, it appears to this Court and this Court so finds that the circumstances of this homicide fit within the definitions of each of those terms. The record reflects that the Defendant told one of the State’s witnesses that he had cut and removed the breasts of the victim while she was still living. In addition, the Defendant told the witness for the State that he had “cut the cunt out” of his victim while she was still living. The pain suffered by the victim prior to death must have been unspeakable. The mental agony that she suffered knowing for certain that she would be always less than a whole woman and probably knowing for certain that her death was imminent, must have been beyond comprehension. Such acts of the Defendant were atrocious which set this capital felony apart from the “norm” of capital felonies. Such actions were especially cruel as one cannot think of greater cruelty to be committed upon a woman. The word heinous being defined as “shockingly evil” is an especially appropriate characterization of the conduct of the Defendant. It might be possible that, absent medical examiner verification of such butchering (the victims body was found 24 months after her death and in an advanced state of deterioration) one should not put too great a reliance upon what the Defendant may have stated in braggadocio fashion to his young companion. However, all of the evidence before the Court confirms that the Defendant was speaking factually. The youthful companion testified that he observed the body of the victim shortly after her death and found it to be “blood spattered”. The stabbing of the victim in the Orange County case indicated that the Defendant’s use of a knife to inflict torturous cuts upon his victims was his modus oper-andi. The Defendant when asked by a friend as to why he did it that way stated, “man that’s my style”. This crime appears to this Court to be a “conscienceless or pitiless crime which is unnecessarily torturous to the victim”.
(Emphasis added.) The underscored finding is the Dixon standard itself. Proffitt requires no more, even though the trial court did go further.
When the Florida Supreme Court reviewed the application of this aggravating circumstance and affirmed the death sentence, it also applied the very language from *1046 Dixon that had been upheld in the Proffitt decision:
We also conclude that the other aggravating circumstance, that the murder was heinous, atrocious, and cruel, was properly-determined by the trial judge to be applicable to this case. One of the individuals who accompanied the appellant to the dump site to view the two corpses testified that the bodies were covered with “quite a bit” of blood and he could see cuts on the breasts, stomach, and chest. The witness further testified that appellant told him of how he tortured the victim with his knife while she was still living. This testimony of appellant’s treatment of his victim clearly places his acts within the category of “conscienceless or pitiless crime which is unnecessarily torturous to the victim” so as to set this “crime apart from the norm of capital felonies.” State v. Dixon,283 So.2d 1 , 9 (Fla.1973), cert. denied,416 U.S. 943 ,94 S.Ct. 1950 ,40 L.Ed.2d 295 (1974).
Spaziano II at 510 (emphasis added). Spazi-ano’s claim, which is premised on the contention that the Dixon standard was not applied, is without merit. 6
III. CONCLUSION
The district court’s judgment denying the 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition is affirmed.
APPENDIX A
LIST OF CLAIMS SPAZIANO RAISED IN THE DISTRICT COURT
1) Denial of right to present and have considered mitigating circumstance evidence in violation of
Hitchcock v. Dugger,
2) Ineffective assistance of counsel at the resentencing proceedings based on counsel’s failure to investigate and present nonstatutory mitigating circumstance evidence;
3) Failure of the Florida courts to credit mitigating circumstance evidence in considering the validity of the jury override, in violation of
Parker v. Dugger,
4) Failure of the Florida courts to consider and weigh as a mitigating circumstance the evidence of Spaziano’s organic brain damage;
5) Ineffective assistance of counsel at the guilt stage based on counsel’s failure to have the testimony of the state’s key witness excluded on grounds that he had been hypnotized and counsel’s failure to inform the jury of that fact;
6) The State’s use of testimony from a witness who had been hypnotized;
7) Insufficiency of the evidence to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt;
8) Violation of
Brady v. Maryland,
9) Unconstitutionality of the “especially heinous, atrocious or cruel” aggravating circumstance both on its face and as applied;
10) Use of an aggravating circumstance not established beyond a reasonable doubt;
11) Incompetency to stand trial at the time of trial and sentencing;
12) Ineffective assistance of counsel based on counsel’s failure to petition the court for a competency evaluation and hearing;
13) Improper prosecutorial аrgument at the sentencing stage;
14) Improper limitation on the cross-examination of a prosecution witness;
15) Jury instruction that it was the juror’s “function” to “agree upon a verdict;”
16) Trial court’s consideration in sentencing of aggravating circumstance factors not presented to the advisory jury whose recommendation the court overrode;
17) Ineffective assistance of counsel on direct appeal;
*1047 18) Unconstitutionality of the Florida Supreme Court’s application of its jury override standards;
19) The trial court and the Florida Supreme Court’s improper evaluation of the reasonableness of the advisory jury recommendation based on those courts’ belief that a jury recommendation of life was proper only if the mitigating circumstances outweighed the aggravating circumstances;
20) Failure to reassign the sentence proceedings on remand to a new judge;
21) Permitting the state to introduce new aggravating circumstance evidence at re-sentencing;
22) Trial court’s refusal to credit residual doubt as a mitigating circumstance;
23) Cumulative error at the trial and sentence proceedings.
Notes
. The Spaziano V opinion disposed of both the appeal from denial of Spaziano’s third Rule 3.850 motion and his first petition for state habe-as relief, which was filed directly with the Florida Supreme Court. However, that opinion itself does not explicitly refer to most of the eleven issues Spaziano raised in his first state habeas petition. The district court's order and opinion in the present proceeding does list all eleven of those issues and the Florida Supreme Court’s implicit holding in rejecting each of them. Spaziano v. Singletary, No. 91-850-CIV-ORL-18 at 9-11 (M.D.Fla. Nov. 30, 1992).
. Rule 2(c) of the Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases in the United States District Courts provides that a habeas petition “shall specify all the grounds for relief ... and shall set forth in summary form the facts supporting each of the grounds thus specified.” Because of its prolixity, the petition filed in this case does not comply with that rule, and the district court could have struck it pursuant to Rule 2(e) ("If a petition ... does not substantially comply with the requirements of rule 2 ..., it may be returned to the petitioner...."). Although the habeas rules require more than notice pleading, and some factual specificity will often be helpful, or even necessary, a habeas petition should not resemble a treatise. Effective writing is concise writing. Attorneys who cannot discipline themselves to write concisely are not effective advocates, and they do a disservice not only to the courts but also to their clients.
.The twenty-three claims Spaziano raised in the district cоurt are listed in Appendix A to this opinion.
. Defense counsel never saw the first PSI, a fact underlying the Gardner error holding. On remand, the trial court decided to order an entirely new PSI, which was distributed at the beginning of the May 21, 1981, motion hearing. During that hearing, and after defense counsel had indicated they intended to present evidence of Spazi-ano’s prison record and also argue residual doubt as nonstatutory mitigating circumstances, defense counsel said that they had not read the PSI, which they had just been given moments before.
. We realize that in
Caspari
the Supreme Court said that, “if the State does argue that the defendant seeks a new rule of constitutional law, the' court
must
apply
Teague
before considering the merits of the claim.” - U.S. at -,
. We also hold, for the reasons set out in the district court’s opinion, that Spaziano’s mental incompetency claim and the ineffective assistance claim related to it are without merit.
