Lead Opinion
Affirmed by published opinion. Chief Judge WILKINSON wrote the opinion, in which Judge NIEMEYER joined. Judge MICHAEL wrote an opinion concurring in part and concurring in the judgment.
OPINION
Kenneth L. Wilson raises various claims regarding his mental capacity at the time of Jacqueline Stephens’ murder. Wilson was sentenced to death for that offense. He appeals the district court’s dismissal of his amended petition for a writ of habeas corpus. We affirm the district court’s judgment.
I.
On March 27, 1993, Jacqueline Stephens was found naked, bound in a spread-eagle fashion to her bed, with multiple stab wounds in her chest, neck, cheek, eyebrow, and arm. The events that led to this tragedy began at approximately 3:00 a.m. that morning when Wilson entered Stephens’ home in Newport News, Virginia. At knifepoint, he forced Stephens, her twelve year-old daughter Alto-mika, and fourteen year-old Takeshia Banks upstairs. Wilson ordered Altomika and Takeshia into a bedroom and took Jacqueline into her own bedroom. While Wilson and Jacqueline were in her bedroom, Altomika heard her mother say “Kenny, why you doing this to me? I go with Pinkey [Altomika’s father], why you doing this to me?” Approximately twenty-five minutes later, Wilson and Jacqueline returned to the bedroom where the girls were. At Wilson’s request, Jacqueline told the girls not to say anything; she then took a shower. While Jacqueline was showering, Wilson ordered Takeshia to disrobe, tied both girls to a bed, and blindfolded them. Wilson, while naked, proceeded to stab both girls, cutting them in the neck.
After Takeshia screamed, Jacqueline confronted Wilson in the hallway. A struggle between Wilson and Jacqueline then ensued, and Altomika thought she heard her mother fall down the stairs. Altomika and Takeshia escaped their bindings and barricaded the bedroom door, but Wilson soon returned and threatened to kill Jacqueline if the girls did not open it. The girls complied, and Wilson secured their bindings and blindfolded them again. He then left the room briefly but soon returned and taunted the blindfolded girls with the knife. Wilson left again, yelling at Jacqueline to find her car keys. Alto-mika heard her mother begin to scream then suddenly stop screaming. Wilson returned once more, threatened to kill the girls, then withdrew. A neighbor saw Wilson depart in Jacqueline’s vehicle at approximately 6:30 a.m. Shortly thereafter, the police found Jacqueline’s naked body covered with blood and tied to her bed. Pubic hairs and a dried white substance which appeared to be semen were observed on her body.
A few hours later, police found Wilson in a trash dumpster, acting “peculiar.” Blood tests taken at a hospital the next day revealed cocaine and opiates in his system. He also was experiencing rhabdomyolysis, a condition involving the breakdown of muscle tissue produced by severe intoxication with certain drugs, including cocaine.
Wilson was charged with murder during the commission of attempted rape, attempted rape, grand larceny, and several counts of abduction and malicious wounding. Wilson’s
After the trial, at which Wilson testified, a jury convicted him on all counts. Following the sentencing phase, the jury recommended a death sentence based on findings of future dangerousness and vileness, and the trial court later sentenced him to death. On appeal, the Virginia Supreme Court upheld the conviction and sentence. Wilson v. Commonwealth,
II.
Wilson alleges several trial errors relating to his mental health. He attributes these eiTors to two parties: his court-appointed mental health expert and his trial counsel. Wilson claims that Dr. Killian performed an inadequate evaluation of his sanity at the time of the offense. He also blames trial counsel for not developing evidence of his insanity and for not requesting a confidential mental health evaluation before trial. In support of these claims, Wilson relies primarily on the report of Dr. Brad Fisher, a clinical forensic psychologist appointed by the district court to assist with the preparation of Wilson’s federal habeas petition. Dr. Fisher met with Wilson, examined Wilson’s medical and family history, and reviewed portions of the transcript from Wilson’s trial. Dr. Fisher found “the evidence is suggestive but not conclusive about the existence of a temporary condition that might have led to a plea of insanity.” However, he concluded there was “little evidence of a permanent major thought disorder, psychosis, or major organic impairment.”
A.
We first consider Wilson’s arguments relating to the evaluation performed by Dr. Killian. In Ake v. Oklahoma, the Supreme Court held that under some circumstances a state must assure an indigent defendant “access to a competent psychiatrist who will conduct an appropriate examination and assist in evaluation, preparation, and presentation of the defense.”
This circuit consistently has “rejected the notion that there is either a procedural or constitutional rule of ineffective assistance of an expert witness, rather than ineffective assistance of counsel.” Pruett v. Thompson,
[i]t will nearly always be possible in cases involving the basic human emotions to find one expert witness who disagrees with another and to procure an affidavit to that effect from the second prospective witness. To inaugurate a constitutional or procedural rule of an ineffective expert witness in lieu of the constitutional standard of an ineffective attorney, we think, is going further than the federal procedural demands of a fair trial and the constitution require.
Waye thus squarely forecloses Wilson’s argument to the extent that he grounds it in a right to effective assistance from Dr. Killian. Wilson’s attempt to locate such a right in the Ake decision also fails. Although Ake refers to an “appropriate” evaluation, we doubt that the Due Process Clause prescribes a malpractice standard for a court-appointed psychiatrist’s performance. Rather, the decision in Ake reflects primarily a concern with ensuring a defendant access to a psychiatrist or psychologist, not with guaranteeing a particular substantive result. See Parker v. Norris,
The above comments serve to illuminate our differences with the partial concurring opinion. That opinion would hold that the Due Process Clause guarantees Wilson the right to a thorough psychiatric examination that meets “the minimum standard of care set by the clinical psychology profession.” Post at 409 (Michael, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment). Drawing from psychiatric texts, the partial concurrence insists that due process requires an exam that includes “a careful analysis of Wilson’s medical records, compilation of an accurate social history (including any history of mental illness or substance abuse), and a complete mental and physical examination (employing whatever diagnostic tests were appropriate under the circumstances).” Post at 409, n. 3.
Moreover, although the partial concurrence purports to distinguish between “an appropriate examination from the psychiatrist” and a “general right to effective assistance of a psychiatrist,” post at 414, they turn out to be one and the same. Indeed, the partial concurrence acknowledges that the basic inquiry is a malpractice determination. See post at 414 (“[T]he right to counsel deals with lawyer malpractice while the right to a psychiatrist deals with psychiatrist malpractice.”) (emphasis omitted). It is easy to see where this position would lead. “The ultimate result would be a never-ending battle of psychiatrists appointed as experts for the sole purpose of discrediting a prior psychiatrist’s diagnosis.” Harris,
Finally, we are reluctant to permit the purely hypothetical horror story advanced by the partial concurrence to establish a broad, freestanding constitutional claim to the effective assistance of a psychiatrist. The Due Process Clause does not require this further transfer of function from its traditional state court locus to federal collateral review. “A conclusion to the contrary would require ... federal courts to engage in a form of ‘psychiatric medical malpractice’ review ... of state court judgments.” Harris,
Even if Ake’s use of the term “appropriate” suggests that an examination must satisfy some minimal level of professional competence, Dr. Killian has clearly satisfied it here. In May 1993, he interviewed Wilson for approximately ninety minutes to determine his competency to stand trial and his sanity at the time of the offense. At this meeting, he explored Wilson’s educational background, medical history, and criminal record. Dr. Killian also evaluated Wilson’s cognitive processes and understanding of the legal proceedings against him. Based on Wilson’s criminal records and this interview, Dr. Killian concluded that Wilson was competent to stand trial and was not suffering from a significant mental disease or defect at the time of the offense. In November 1993, Dr. Killian again met with Wilson and discussed his general psychiatric condition, background, and current status. Though Dr. Fisher reviewed more records than Dr. Killi-an and explored Wilson’s mental state in greater detail, his deeper exploration into Wilson’s past does not demonstrate that Dr. Killian’s examination was inappropriate.
Finally, Wilson himself appears to have been partly responsible for the difficulties that Dr. Killian encountered in conducting a more complete examination. During the November 1993 meeting, according to Dr. Killi-an, Wilson refused to discuss “any of his thoughts, feelings, or actions during the time frame which contained the events which ultimately led to charges against him.” At a hearing shortly before trial, Wilson again made clear to the court that he did not desire an evaluation. During the hearing, the following colloquy took place between Wilson and the judge:
THE COURT: Do you desire the psychiatric or psychological evaluation which you originally indicated to your lawyers that you did desire? Are you giving that up now?
THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.
THE COURT: All right, Mr. Wilson. What is your pleasure with respect to the psychiatric or psychological evaluation?
THE DEFENDANT: I do not want to speak to him.
THE COURT: You do not want to speak to Doctor Killian, correct?
THE DEFENDANT: Correct.
Dr. Killian can hardly be faulted for not conducting a more thorough evaluation when Wilson repeatedly, and after consultation with his lawyers, declined to discuss matters further with him. Thus even if Ake provided some standard for an appropriate evaluation, Dr. Kilhian's evaluation of Wilson satisfied it.
B.
Wilson also attributes the failure to develop a more complete mental health defense to his trial counsel. Wilson alleges two basic errors constituting ineffective assistance. First, he claims that trial counsel inadequately investigated possible defenses thatWilson was insane or lacked the requisite mens rea to commit the crimes. Second, he argues that trial counsel's October 1993 request for a mental health evaluation was delinquent and deprived him of the benefit of a conflden-tial report. Like the district court, we find both of these claims to be meritless.
To prevail on his claims of ineffective assistance, Wilson must satisfy two well-established requirements. First, he "must show that counsel's representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness." Strickland v. Washington,
Wilson's trial counsel was not ineffective in declining to investigate his mental health defenses or to develop them at trial. The decision not to pursue this line of de-lease more fully was a reasonable one. In May, counsel had received Dr. Killian's report concluding that Wilson was not mentally ill at the time of the offense. To be reasonably effective, counsel was not required to second-guess the contents of this report. See Pruett,
Counsel also reasonably chose not to develop a mental health defense at trial.
Furthermore, even if counsel’s investigation or presentation had been deficient in some regard, it was not prejudicial. Dr. Fisher’s report offers only limited support for Wilson’s present theory that he was insane at the time of the offense or lacked the requisite mens rea to commit an intentional crime. Dr. Fisher concluded that “there is little evidence of a permanent major thought disorder, psychosis, or major organic impairment.” In this respect, his opinion tracks the May 1993 opinion of Dr. Killian, who found that Wilson “was not suffering from a significant mental disease or defect, psychosis, major organic impairment” or other similar malady at the time of the offense. Even where Dr. Fisher’s opinions vary from Dr. Killian’s, his endorsement of Wilson’s present theory is qualified at best. Though Dr. Fisher believed that Wilson’s abusive upbringing and his use of intoxicants around the time of the offense may have contributed to a temporary psychosis, he found such evidence to be merely “suggestive but not conclusive.” In light of Dr. Fisher’s partial agreement with Dr. Killian and his inconclusive judgment about whether Wilson was temporarily insane, counsel’s failure to introduce this evidence is hardly “sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome” of Wilson’s trial. Strickland,
III.
Wilson next presses two claims that he is actually innocent of the crimes for which the jury convicted him. He maintains that Dr. Fisher’s report demonstrates that his voluntary intoxication at the time of the offense produced a temporary insanity. He also contends that the report shows his level of intoxication was so severe that he lacked the mens rea to commit an intentional crime. The district court found both of these claims to be defaulted because Wilson failed to raise them in state court. Wilson now asserts that he raises these claims simply as “‘gateway[s]’ through which he may pass to argue the merits of his defaulted claims.” Satcher,
Claims of actual innocence, whether presented as freestanding ones, see Herrera v. Collins,
We cannot accept Wilson’s claim that he is actually innocent because his voluntary intoxication caused him to become temporarily insane. Voluntary intoxication generally does not provide a defense unless it induces a permanent insanity. See Little v. Commonwealth,
Wilson’s claim that he lacked the mens rea to commit an intentional crime is equally unavailing. Virginia does recognize that “when a person voluntarily becomes so intoxicated that he is incapable of deliberation or premeditation, he cannot commit a class of murder that requires proof of a deliberate and premeditated killing.” Wright v. Commonwealth,
IV.
Wilson next claims that there was insufficient evidence to convict him of attempted rape. Since Wilson’s indictment listed attempted rape as the predicate offense to capital murder, Wilson uses this claim indirectly to attack his death sentence as well. Finding ample evidence to support the conviction for attempted rape, both the Virginia Supreme Court on direct appeal and the federal district court on collateral review rejected this claim.
Though claims of insufficient evidence are cognizable on collateral review, a federal court’s review of such claims is “sharply limited.” Wright v. West,
The Jackson standard “must be applied with explicit reference to the substantive elements of the criminal offense as defined by state law.” Jackson,
Sufficient evidence supported the jury’s conclusion that Wilson took an overt act toward consummation of the rape. On direct appeal, the Virginia Supreme Court found that Wilson’s nudity, his isolating Jacqueline Stephens from the young girls, his forcibly binding Jacqueline naked to her bed, and the presence of what appeared to be pubic hairs and semen on Jacqueline’s body satisfied the overt act requirement.
Moreover, such physical evidence is not even necessary to show that Wilson took a direct act toward raping Jacqueline. See Fortune,
Sufficient evidence likewise supported the jury’s finding that Wilson had formed the requisite intent to rape. The Virginia Supreme Court concluded that Wilson’s actions along with Jacqueline’s statement “Kenny, why you doing this to me? I go with Pinkey, why you doing this to me?” supported a finding of intent to rape.
Wilson argues that, under Virginia law, when the state’s proof of intent is entirely circumstantial, it must exclude every reasonable hypothesis of innocence. See Rogers v. Commonwealth,
V.
Lastly, Wilson argues that the trial court should have instructed the jury about the actual effects of his life sentence. Specifically, he maintains the jury should have known that he would not be eligible for parole for twenty-five years. He claims that both the Eighth Amendment’s guarantee against cruel and unusual punishment and the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of due process entitled him to such an instruction. We disagree.
We previously rejected this precise argument in Peterson v. Murray.
Wilson attempts to evade the ruling in Peterson by arguing that the legal landscape fundamentally changed after the Supreme Court’s decision in Simmons v. South Carolina,
Simmons, thus, has not altered our decisions in Peterson and Turner to the extent they held that the Constitution does not entitle defendants to an instruction about when they would become eligible for parole. Simmons did not address whether the Eighth Amendment required an instruction on parole ineligibility, see
VI.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The parties engage in a protracted fight over whether these claims are procedurally defaulted. The Commonwealth charges that Wilson failed to raise any of these complaints until his federal habeas petition. Wilson retorts that he has several grounds establishing cause and prejudice to excuse any default such as a lengthy delay in notifying state habeas counsel of his appointment. Because we believe Wilson's claims to be meritless in all events, we need not resolve this dispute.
. For similar reasons, we reject Wilson's argument that counsel was ineffective for not requesting a psychiatric evaluation until the end of October 1993. Since Dr. Killian already had concluded that Wilson was sane at the time of the offense, counsel's decision not to seek another evaluation sooner was hardly unreasonable.. Furthermore, upon giving notice of an intent to present psychological evidence in mitigation, counsel would have been required to disclose the results of such an evaluation-regardless of when it was requested; thus, the timing of the request could not affect the trial's outcome. See Va.Code Ann. § 19.2-264.3:1.D-E..
. Wilson briefly argues that the district court erroneously denied him an evidentiary hearing on his claims of ineffective assistance. Recently, this circuit explained that "[cjvidentiary hearings have never been required on federal collateral review of state petitioners' ineffectiveness claims.” Eaton v. Angelone,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and concurring in the judgment:
I concur in the result the majority opinion reaches, and I join in its reasoning, except for parts II and V. I disagree with the majority’s suggestion in part II.A. that the Due Process Clause does not provide an indigent criminal defendant with the right to a court-appointed psychiatrist (or clinical psychologist) who does not commit malpractice when examining the defendant. I also have an uneasy feeling that part H.B., which holds that counsel was not ineffective for failing to second-guess the conclusions of the defense psychologist, might be misinterpreted to mean that counsel is not required to seek a second opinion when a court-appointed psychologist conducts a wholly inadequate mental examination. Further, although I agree with the majority’s conclusion in part V that the petitioner in this case had no due process right to inform the sentencing jury when he would become eligible for parole, I cannot agree with the majority’s characterization of the precedents governing this issue. I therefore write separately to express my views on the right to a psychiatrist, to emphasize that a defense lawyer retains at least some responsibility for ensuring that the psychiatrist does his job, to offer my interpretation of the cases dealing with the parole eligibility issue, and to explain why I would affirm the district court’s denial of the petitioner’s habeas claims.
I.
I have no quarrel with the majority’s observation that “[t]he Constitution does not entitle a criminal defendant to the effective assistance of a [court-appointed] expert [psychiatric] witness,” ante at 401. That is a correct statement of the law in this circuit. See Waye v. Murray,
The majority expresses some doubt about (but does not squarely reject) Wilson’s claim that he was entitled to an appropriate examination, see ante at 401. The majority’s doubt is based on the point that Ake does not “guarantee[ ] a particular substantive result,” ante at 401. Of course, Ake does not require that a state provide an indigent defendant with a psychiatrist who will come to a favorable conclusion, cf. Poyner,
The majority appears to disagree. Ake’s focus, the majority reminds us, was on “ensuring a defendant access to a psychiatrist or psychologist.” Ante at 401. This statement, while true, gets us nowhere. Of course, Ake did not explicitly decide whether an indigent defendant, is entitled to a court-appointed psychiatrist whose psychiatric examination does not constitute malpractice. The case did not present that question because the defendant there received no sanity examination whatsoever. See Ake,
We do not have to scrutinize Ake’s reasoning closely to understand why the due process right to a court-appointed psychiatrist necessarily encompasses the right to an appropriate examination by that psychiatrist. Simple logic dictates that without the latter right the former is meaningless. An example is helpful here. In the majority’s view, a state apparently would fulfill its duty under Ake by appointing a competent psychiatrist (with all the right credentials) to examine a defendant, even if the psychiatrist performs a wholly inadequate examination. Let us say, for example, that a psychiatrist saw the defendant for only five minutes, in which time the doctor’s only “diagnostic tests” were to ask the defendant his name and ask him to count to 100.
I cannot agree with the majority that Dr. Killian performed an “appropriate” examination. This is fact-finding, and the record does not support it. Dr. Killian’s ninety-minute interview of Wilson (in which Dr. Killian did not perform a single diagnostic test or consult any of Wilson’s medical records) and Dr. Killian’s half-page “report” (which summarily concluded that Wilson was sane at the time of his offense) did not “clearly” meet the standard of care. In fact, my reading of a report by Dr. Brad Fisher, a clinical psychologist who examined Wilson in 1997, suggests that Dr. Killian’s May 1993 examination of Wilson fell short of the standard. Dr. Fisher’s examination of Wilson is a model of professional care, in sharp contrast to Dr. Killian’s examination. Dr. Fisher interviewed Wilson, performed a full battery of tests on him, studied (among other things) Wilson’s medical records, and obtained a full social and medical history (for which he consulted sources independent of Wilson). Further, Dr. Fisher reviewed Dr. Killian’s notes and report from the May 1993 examination. According to Dr. Fisher, “Dr. Killian drew his conclusions without conducting a complete or comprehensive investigation” of Wilson’s mental health history. Further, Dr. Fisher wrote, Dr. Killian should have studied the “considerable available data” concerning Wilson’s mental condition, including Wilson’s medical records and history of substance abuse, “rather than basing opinions strictly on his interview.” “At a minimum,” Dr. Fisher said, Dr. Killian should have considered information regarding “the level of drugs in Mr. Wilson’s system” at the time of the offense. Although the Constitution did not give Wilson the right to an ideal examination like the one provided by Dr. Fisher, it required an examination and diagnosis that reflected an accepted minimum of skill and care. Dr. Fisher’s report suggests that Dr. Killian’s abbreviated interview of Wilson did not meet the relevant standard of care because Dr. Killian failed follow the bare minimum of procedures necessary for an adequate sanity examination. This was enough to create an issue of fact about whether Dr. Killian’s May 1993 examination of Wilson constituted malpractice.
Despite my disagreement with the majority on the Ake issue, I agree that Wilson’s petition should be denied. I would hold that Wilson’s Ake claim was procedurally defaulted. Wilson argues on appeal that he is not barred from raising the Ake claim because his default was excused. Even if this excuse was valid (it is not; see part II.B.), I would not allow Wilson to raise it to negate the procedural default of his Ake claim. Wilson waived this excuse by failing to mention it in district court. There, Wilson did not respond to the Commonwealth’s argument that he procedurally defaulted his Ake claim by asserting that any default was excused. Rather, Wilson argued that he had presented his Ake argument in state court.
II.
As an alternative to his Ake claim, Wilson argues that his counsel was constitutionally ineffective under Strickland v. Washington,
A.
While I would recognize a right to an appropriate mental examination under Ake, the majority has studiously avoided doing that here. The majority seems to say that any Ake right can only be enforced through a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. The majority goes on to hold that the failure of Wilson’s trial counsel to second-guess Dr. Killian’s sanity evaluation was not constitutionally ineffective. Ante at 403. I read the majority’s holding .to be based solely on the facts of this case: since Dr. Killian’s examination was appropriate, see ante at 402, there was no reason for defense counsel to second-guess the doctor’s methods or his conclusion that Wilson was sane at the time of the offense.
It is well established that substandard performance by a court-funded psychiatrist (or clinical psychologist) can be the basis of a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel if, by failing to ensure that the psychiatrist performed adequately, counsel’s performance fell outside of the broad range of conduct that constitutes reasonably effective assistance. See, e.g., United States v. Kauffman,
Lawyer oversight is unlikely to result in full effectuation of Ake’s mandate, however. Ake held that due process requires an indigent defendant be provided with “access to a competent psychiatrist who will [1] conduct an appropriate examination and [2] assist in evaluation, preparation and presentation of the defense.” Ake v. Oklahoma,
The majority does not distinguish between the lawyer’s role and the psychiatrist’s role, however. Rather, the majority would place the full burden of spotting psychiatrist malpractice on defense counsel by putting counsel in charge of ensuring that the Ake right is protected. This is a questionable arrangement. The Ake right, derived from the Due Process Clause, is separate from and independent of the Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel. The former right was first recognized in Ake; the latter
The majority apparently recognizes that, due to lack of medical and technical expertise, defense counsel often will have difficulty finding fault in a court-appointed psychiatrist’s examination or in challenging its conclusions. Cf. ante at 404 (citing Washington,
I would prefer a different route, however. I would not give defense counsel the whole burden of ensuring that the psychiatrist’s examination is appropriate. I would give this task, which only a psychiatrist is properly qualified to do, to the psychiatrist. This would create a division of labor that best effectuates both parts of Ake’s mandate. The psychiatrist, the expert on mental examinations, would be responsible for providing the “appropriate examination,” Ake,
Since I would place the brunt of the burden of ensuring that a court-appointed psychiatrist’s examination was appropriate on the psychiatrist (or clinical psychologist), not on counsel, I do not agree that the central question before us here is whether counsel was reasonable to rely on Dr. Killian’s report, see ante at 403. The key question we should ask is whether Dr. Killian’s first examination was appropriate. It was not, assuming that the facts alleged in Wilson’s petition are true. See part I, above.
Our inquiry does not end there, however. As I have said, in some cases defense counsel’s failure to recognize a court-appointed psychiatrist’s obvious malpractice and request a second opinion can constitute ineffective assistance of counsel.
However, even if trial counsel was ineffective with regard to Wilson’s May 1993 examination, Wilson’s claim does not succeed. First, Wilson did not argue in state court that trial counsel should have obtained a second mental examination, and this procedural default was not excused. See part II.B. Second, even if trial counsel was ineffective for failing to provide Dr. Killian with Wilson’s medical records, Wilson suffered no prejudice from that mistake. Wilson has not proved that Dr. Killian would have testified that he was insane if the doctor had performed an appropriate first examination. See ante at 403-04.
B.
The majority also rejects Wilson’s claim that defense counsel’s failure to obtain a second mental examination constituted ineffective assistance, reasoning that no second examination was needed because Dr. Killian concluded that Wilson was sane. See ante at 403 n. 2. I disagree. Even if counsel thought that Wilson was sane, counsel ought to have requested mitigation evidence from a psychologist. Dr. Killian’s May 1993 examination of Wilson dealt with just one potential mitigating factor, Wilson’s mental state. However, a second psychiatric evaluation could have unearthed other kinds of mitigating information about Wilson (such as his childhood exposure to physical abuse) that had little to do with his sanity. (Here, defense counsel admitted that a second examination by Dr. Killian might uncover mitigating factors that would be helpful at Wilson’s sentencing.) Thus, even if it was reasonable for counsel to decide, in reliance on Dr. Killi-an’s report, not to obtain a further evaluation of Wilson’s mental state, see, e.g., Gilbert v. Moore,
I would hold that counsel erred by waiting to move for a second examination until two days after notifying the trial court that the defense planned to use mental health evidence at trial. Counsel’s delay was error because under Virginia law the report from any second examination was discoverable by the prosecution as soon as the defense notified the court of its intent to use mental health evidence. See Va.Code Ann. § 19.2-264.3:1(D) (Michie 1995). The result of counsel’s failure to request and obtain a second examination before notifying the court that the defense planned to use mental health evidence was that the defense team lost the opportunity to keep the results of Wilson’s proposed second examination confidential. Once counsel realized this mistake and told Wilson that they would have to choose between a non-confidential examination and no examination at all, Wilson chose the latter option. Therefore, counsel’s failure to obtain a confidential examination forced Wilson to forego a second examination and miss an opportunity to obtain psychiatric mitigation evidence at sentencing. This was ineffective lawyering.
The majority concludes that counsel’s failure to obtain a confidential second examination was harmless, however, because “counsel would have been required to disclose the results of such an examination” at trial anyway. Ante at 403 n. 2. Again, I disagree. Wilson does not claim that he was harmed directly by the prospect of the report’s disclosure. The harm from counsel’s mistake, Wilson argues, was that it placed him between a rock and a hard place. Not knowing whether the examination would unearth helpful or harmful information for the defense, Wilson had to decide whether to forego the examination or take the chance that detrimental information would come out in the examination and fall into the Commonwealth’s hands. And, although Wilson’s decision to forego the second examination was voluntary, Wilson never would have had to make this tough decision if counsel had not put him in the unenviable situation of choosing a confidential examination or no examination at all. As a result of counsel’s mistake, Wilson never had the opportunity to obtain a confidential psychological examination and decide whether to use that evidence on its own merit (based on an informed assessment of whether the benefit of the report outweighed any harm of its disclosure). This hindered Wilson’s ability to develop mitigating evidence for sentencing.
Despite the merit of Wilson’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim, I would hold that it is procedurally barred. In his state habeas petition, Wilson raised a substantive claim that he was denied a second examination, but he made no allegation that his problem arose due to bad lawyering. And, Wilson fails to convince me that this default is excused because the “state corrective processes” were either absent or inadequate to vindicate his right, see 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1)(B) (1994). First, Wilson is simply wrong to say that he could not raise his claim in state habeas proceedings. In Virginia it is possible to raise an effective assistance of counsel claim in a habeas petition, even though the claim was not raised at trial or on appeal. Cf. Walker v. Mitchell,
III.
Finally, I would also reject Wilson’s claim that he should have been allowed to inform the sentencing jury he was ineligible for parole for 25 years. As the majority explains, Simmons v. South Carolina,
However, I hesitate to join the majority’s discussion of Simmons. The majority is wrong to say that our decisions, either pre or TpostSimmons, govern the substantive question presented by Wilson.
. None of our cases have dealt with a claim that a court-appointed psychiatrist (or clinical psy
.Further, even if Ake does not give an indigent defendant a right to an "appropriate examination” that is independent of the right to effective assistance of counsel, I would hold that the Constitution places a heightened responsibility on counsel to ensure that the defendant receives an appropriate examination. See part II.A., below.
. This would have included a careful analysis of Wilson’s medical records, compilation of an accurate social history (including any history of mental illness or substance abuse), and a complete mental and physical examination (employing whatever diagnostic tests were appropriate under the circumstances). See generally Comprehensive Textbook of Psychiatry/IV 543-48, 836-37 (Harold I. Kaplan & Benjamin J. Sadock eds., 4th ed.1985).
. However, I believe that the Ake right cannot and should not function exactly like the right to effective assistance of counsel. As I explain in part II.A., below, I would recognize the existence of a narrow right to an appropriate examination and require that all other challenges to the psychiatrist’s performance as a member of the defense team be brought as challenges to the ade
. If the Ake Court had viewed the right to a psychiatrist as providing mere access to a psychiatrist, I expect that more Justices would have joined the Chief Justice's concurring opinion in that case. See Ake,
. This hypothetical may be extreme, but I can imagine many other situations in which a psychiatrist might perform a grossly inadequate examination. The doctor could botch the exam (since no one is perfect) or he could be tired, be having a bad day, or simply be in a hurry to make some appointment outside the office.
.The criminal justice system would not be put under strain if we were to recognize a defendant's right to a psychiatrist who does his job. That psychiatrists sometimes disagree with each other about diagnoses is no reason to worry that the finality of convictions will be undermined, see ante at 401. Implementing a malpractice standard would not allow a defendant to challenge his conviction just because some other psychiatrist disagrees with the court-appointed psychiatrist’s diagnosis. Rather, the petitioner would have to prove (with the assistance of a new psychiatrist) that the court-appointed expert's examination totally failed to meet the relevant standard of care. Of course, such claims would rarely succeed. Just as with the claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant will rarely be able to prove that his psychiatrist conducted an examination that was constitutionally deficient.
. If the majority is suggesting, ante at 402, that Dr. Killian conducted a second mental examination of Wilson, I disagree. Dr. Killian did not perform a second examination of Wilson during their brief second meeting in November 1993. In any event, whether Wilson had a second examination is irrelevant to his claim that Dr. Killi-an committed malpractice in his first examination in May 1993. After the first examination Dr. Killian concluded that Wilson was sane at the time of the offense. This examination was entirely unrelated to the second meeting between Dr. Killian and Wilson, which was scheduled by Wilson’s counsel in an attempt to develop mitigation evidence for the sentencing phase of Wilson's trial.
. Of course, I disagree with the majority’s finding that Dr. Killian’s examination was appropriate. See part I, above.
. This would, I believe, give rise to two independent constitutional violations: a violation of Ake and a violation of Gideon.
. I also cannot agree that counsel "reasonably chose not to develop a mental health defense at trial” because that defense was inconsistent with Wilson's testimony that he did not commit the crime, see ante at 403. We should not speculate that if Dr. Killian had conducted an appropriate examination, defense counsel would have decided not to put on an insanity defense.
. But cf. Brown v. Texas, - U.S. -, -,
. Peterson v. Murray, 904 F.2d 882 (4th Cir.1990), held that the Eighth Amendment was not violated when a court refused to allow the defendant to inform the sentencing jury he was ineligible for parole for 20 years. See id. at 886-87. Peterson did not decide the due process claim that Wilson makes. Turner v. Bass,
