OPINION
Kеvin McCarty entered a plea of guilty to two counts of child molestation as Class A felonies. 1 He sought post-conviction re-Hef and his petition was denied. McCarty raises a single issue on appeal, which we restate as whether MeCarty was denied effective assistance of counsel when his counsel failed at sentencing to offer evidence of McCarty's mental impairment and other potential mitigating cireum-stances. We reverse. 2
FACTS
McCarty was charged with four counts of child molesting, two as Class A felonies and two as Class C felonies. Counsel was appointed to represent McCarty, and McCarty eventually agreed to plead guilty to the two Class A felonies. The plea
McCarty's counsel did not raise as mitigating circumstances at the sentencing hearing that McCarty was mentally retarded, had himself been molested, and had a troubled family background. McCarty sought post-conviction relief, asserting his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate or raise those potential mitigators.
McCarty presented testimony at his post-conviction hearing from a professor of psychological science and- developmental psychology that McCarty had been in special education classes and that his IQ was between 68 and 70. 3 When he was twenty years old, tests revealed MeceCarty was functioning at a ten-to-thirteen-year-old level. 4 The psychologist testified that mentally retarded people tend to exercise poor judgment and have difficulty controlling their anger and other impulses because they sometimes do not learn from their experiences.
Trial counsel met with McCarty only once before the guilty plea hearing. He testified that based on his interaction with McCarty, McCarty did not appear mentally disabled. Counsel therefore did not pursue an investigation of MceCarty's mental status. Counsel did not recall whether he had read MeCarty's lengthy confession, which included McCаrty's statement that he had been molested. He did not recall whether he reviewed McCarty's court file or whether he had received a call from McCarty's sister about McCarty's family background. Counsel did not secure the services of an investigator or a mental health professional nor did he try to obtain MceCarty's school or mental health records. He did not recall whether he and McCarty discussed McCarty's family history and background or whether McCarty had offered him any direction in terms of presenting evidence at the sentencing hearing.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
Standard of Review
Post-conviction proceedings are not "super appeals" through which convict, ed persons can raise issues they failed to raise at trial or on direct appeal. Rather, they afford petitioners a limited opportunity to raise issues that were unavailable or unknown at trial and on direct appeal. Bahm v. State,
To prevail with an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, a defendant must show counsel's performance was so deficient that he was not functioning as the "counsel" guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment and that this deficient performance prejudiced the defendant. Games v. State,
Prejudice exists when "there is a reasonable probability that the result of the proceeding would have been different but for defense counsel's inadequate representation." Id. "[A] court need not determine whether counsel's performance was deficient before examining the prejudice suffered by the defendant as a result of the alleged deficiencies." Games,
Deficient Performance
We believe counsel's performance was deficient because he failed to present as mitigators four cireumstances McCarty asserts should have been before the court: 1) McCarty's mental disability, 2) McCarty's own molestation as a child, 3) the likelihood he could be successfully rehabilitated, and 4) the fact his сonfession went beyond what the victims had reported. 5
The requirement that a sentencing court consider and articulate certain factors in imposing a particular sentence applies to at least some sentences imposed after a guilty plea. See Abercrombie v. State,
The court there noted a number of mitigating cireumstances that the sentencing court should have examined:
Some of the mitigating factors in this case were that there was no death, no permanent physical impairment, no destruction of property, no weapons involved and no evidence of deliberation. Beyond the actual facts of the crime itself, the nature and background of the individual defendant should also be considered. Here, defendant's prior criminal record was not extensive and involved no crimes of violence. The defendant showed remorse for the instant crime and agreed to plead guilty and spare the victim the ordeal of a trial. Defendant was holding a steady job and had the support of a good family in the community. The unique and unplanned cireumstances surrounding the incident tend to show that the crime would not be likely to happen again. Several members of defendant's family wrote to the judge showing their concern fоr and support of defendant.
Id. at 414,
McCarty asserts ineffectiveness in counsel's "complete lack of preparation for the sentencing hearing," (Br. of Petitioner-Appellant at 16), which lack of preparation caused counsel to overlook
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the additional mitigators McCarty urges. "In determining an appropriate sentence, all cireumstances of the particular crime and the background of the individual offender should be considered ... [t]his individualized sentencing process requires possession of the fullest information рossible concerning the defendant's life and characteristics." Thomas v. State,
We note initially that counsel met with McCarty only onee. McCarty does not contend this constitutes deficient performance per se, but it seems obvious that evidence of only a single meeting between counsel and client in a multiple-felony case would alert a reviewing court to the possibility of inadequate representation. We acknowledge that McCarty had confessed to the charged crimes, 7 and counsel was likely burdened by the relentless demands invariably faced by public defenders. However, these circumstances do not excuse a perfunctory investigation of MeCarty's background for sentencing purposes. Had counsel spent more time with McCarty in preparing for the guilty plea and sentencing hearings, he might well have observed manifestations of his client's mental retardation and sought more detailed information regarding his family history, sexual victimization as a teenager, and potential for successful rehabilitation.
1. McCarty's Mental Disability
McCarty's counsel violated prevailing prоfessional norms when he failed to interview McCarty's family members, review the court file, obtain McCarty's educational and mental health records, or consult with a mental health professional. In Prowell v. State,
However, McCarty notes "red flags" (Br. of Petitioner-Appellant at 19) that should have put counsel on notice MeCarty was mentally impaired. These include a letter McCarty wrote to the court that exhibits extremely poor grammar, spelling and punctuation, 9 and a report by the Hamilton Center that was referred to, but not included with, the presentence report. The Hamilton Center report indicated McCarty's cognitive functioning was at a low level.
2. McCarty's Upbringing
The State asserts McCаrty's counsel was unaware of facts about MceCarty's life that would have warranted investigation because McCarty had reported in interviews for his presentence report that his home life was stable. Again, MeCarty directs us to "red flags" that should have warranted investigation by counsel. In the letter to the court referred to above as an indicator of McCarty's mental disability, McCarty wrote he had been "messed with when i was younger mine started when i was 15teen and didn't stop till i was 17teen[.]" (App. at 56.) MecCarty's counsel did not recall whether he read the transeript of McCarty's confession, but testified he routinely does so. That transcript indicated McCarty had been molested as an adolescent. The presen-tence report referred to one incident of molestation when McCarty was fifteen.
Counsel should also have brought to the court's attention MecCarty's "seriously troubled" family background. (Br. of Petitioner-Appellant at 24.) McCarty elicited testimony at the post-conviction hearing that a mentally retarded molestation vie-tim from a dysfunctional family is particularly prone as an adult to "acting out behavior" in the form of child molestation. (Id.) The post-conviction court noted evidence of a difficult childhood warrants little, if any, mitigating weight, citing Coleman v. State,
Nonetheless, it is certainly true that 'evidence about the defendant's background and character is relevant because of the belief, long held by this society, that defendants who commit eriminal acts that are attributable to a disadvantaged background, or to emotional and mental problems, may be less culpable than defendants who have no such excuse."
8. Other Mitigating Factors
McCarty offered evidence at the post-conviction hearing that he would likely respond well to treatment in that he can learn to better control his behavior and exercise better judgment; that the vietims did not sustain physical injury;
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and that he has accepted responsibility for his crimes and is remorseful. See Cloum v. State,
Prejudice
The post-conviction court determined McCarty was not prejudiced by his counsel's performance because none of the information counsel could have presented "rises to the level of mitigation that would offset the three aggravating factors"
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the trial court found in sentencing MeCarty. (App. at 188.) It noted "evidence of a difficult childhood warrants little, if any, mitigating weight." Id. (quoting Coleman,
Sentencing lies within the discretion of the trial court. Thacker v. State,
The State's entire argument that McCarty was not prejudiced by his counsel's performance is premised on the general rule that the trial court has discretion to disregard or reject mitigating civreum-stances urgеd by a defendant, Bocko v. State,
However, the prejudice McCarty suffered arose not because the court declined to recognize the mitigators but because the mitigating cireumstances were not placed before the court at all; the court was therefore unable to even consider them. McCarty was prejudiced by trial counsel's failure to investigate and present the available mitigation evidence because it deprived the sentencing court of the information it needed to make an informed decision and left the court little to balance against the aggravating circumstances.
The dispositive question in determining whether a defendant is prejudiced by counsel's failure at sentencing to present mitigating evidence is what effect the totality of the omitted mitigation evidence would have had on the sentence. Coleman,
1. McCarty's Mental Disability
McCarty was prejudiced by counsel's failure to bring to the court's attention McCarty's mental disability. Our supreme court has indicated that, at least in some cireumstances, mental retardation must be given weight as a mitigator. In Young v. State,
2. -The Other Mitigators
McCarty was also prejudiced because the court was unable to consider other potentially mitigating evidence. An adequate investigation by counsel, he notes, would have revealed the troubled family history, which caused psychological damage "directly linked to McCarty's offenses." (Br. of Petitioner-Appellant at 24.) As post-conviction testimony indicated, adequate investigation and evaluation by a mental health professional would have revealed McCarty "stands a good chance of being successfully rehabilitated." (Id. at 26.) While counsel noted at sentencing that McCarty had confessed, he did not mention that the confession went beyond what the victims had reported. McCarty notes the victims' statements alone would have supported only the Class C charges and not the Class A charges to which McCarty agreed to plead guilty.
Appellate courts are-and should be-reluctant to second-guess the decisions that trial counsel must make in representing clients, as well as the decisions that trial courts must make in sentencing erimi-nal defendants. This reluctance is perhaps еven greater in the case of a guilty plea, with its emphasis on finality and expediency, provided that the defendant has knowingly, voluntarily, and intelligently waived his rights.
Assuming, as we have determined here, that trial counsel performed deficiently in failing to investigate potential mitigating cireumstances, we must make the difficult determination whether there is a reasonable probability the result of the sentencing proceeding would have been different but for counsel's inadequate representation. Much of this difficulty is due to Indiana's sentencing scheme, which provides for relatively wide ranges of punishment in the most serious felony classes 14 and properly vests trial courts with substantial discretion in considering aggravating and mitigating cireumstances and in determining punishments appropriate in light of the nature of the offense and the character of the offender. 15 Given the subjectivity inherent in the sentencing process, a reviewing court is hard pressed to conclude there is a reasonable probability that the trial court would have imposed a lesser sentence had it been presented with additional mitigating evidence that trial counsel should have brought to light.
CONCLUSION
Counsel's failure to investigate and present to the court numerous potentially mitigating circumstances constituted deficient performance, and there is a reasonable probability the result of the sentencing prоceeding would have been different had defense counsel presented those mitigating circumstances to the court for its consideration. We accordingly reverse the denial of MecCarty's petition for post-conviction relief and revise McCarty's sentence.
Notes
. Ind.Code § 35-42-4-3.
. We heard oral argument on October 28, 2003, at the University of Southern Indiana in Evansville. We thank the school for its hospitality and commend counsel for the quality of their appellate advocacy.
. "An IQ of 100 is considered average. To be diagnosed as mentally retarded, a person must have an IQ significantly below average, below 70 to 75. If a person scores below 70 on a properly administered and scored IQ test, he or she is in the bottom 2 percent of the American population." Andrea D. Lyon, Cruel and Unusual, Ilinois Issues (June 2002), available at http://illinoisis-sues.uis.edu/features/2002june/retarded .html.
. Thus, McCarty notes, at the time of the offenses his "intellectual and emotional age was approximately equivalent to that of his victims." (Br. of Petitioner-Appellant at 22.)
. McCarty's counsel placed before the court four mitigating factors: McCarty's age, his admission of guilt and acceptance of responsibility, his lack of significant criminal history, and his apology to his family as expressed in a letter his sister wrote.
. The State appears to characterize counsel's failure to mention the mitigating circumstances urged by McCarty as a deliberate "choice" made for "strategic or tactical reasons," (Br. of Appellee at 6), which choices generally do not demonstrate ineffective assistance of counsel. See, eg., Stаte v. Miller,
. We are particularly troubled that McCarty's trial counsel failed to notice that the prosecutor at the guilty plea hearing recited only the facts establishing the two Class C felony child molesting counts, not the two Class A felony counts to which McCarty entered guilty pleas. (Compare Tr. of Guilty Plea Hearing at 12-13 with Appellant's Apр. at 29-30 (charging information)). McCarty's postcon-viction counsel also failed to mention this glaring oversight. The Class C felony counts were dismissed pursuant to the agreement.
. The State cites Prowell as authority for this assertion. There, counsel was found ineffective for failing to adequately investigate Pro-well's mental illness. Counsel suspected Pro-well had a serious mental illness but did not consider seeking a guilty but mentally ill plea agreement. 'This step is certainly not necessary to effective counsel in every case. Here, however, there were obvious indications that Prowell's case did present substantial issues turning on the development of this evidence."
. While the punctuation, grammar, and capitalization in this letter are indeed "extremely poor," as McCarty suggests, we decline to hold that such shortcomings necessarily indicate retardation. Nevertheless, the letter should have prompted counsel to investigate McCarty's allegations of adolescent sexual abuse and the possibility that he suffered from a learning disability or mental deficit.
We also take issue with McCarty's chаracterization of his mental retardation and "severely disadvantaged background" as "directly linked" to his offenses (Br. of Petitioner, Appellant at 21, 25). A person with these attributes might be considered more likely than another to engage in criminal activity, but to assert a definitive correlation between these attributes and criminality is to paint with much too broad a brush.
. McCarty cites Walker v. State,
. The court found as aggravating factors that McCarty had a criminal history, prior attempts to rehabilitate him had been unsuccessful, and there were two victims.
. We are concerned that this statement suggests the trial court might not have distinguished between the legal standard for an insanity defense, i.e., that as a result of mental disease or defect, McCarty was "unable to appreciate the wrongfuiness of the conduct at the time of the offense," Ind.Code § 35-41-3-6(a), and the legal standard for determining whether a mental disability is a mitigating circumstance. McCarty did not raise an insanity defense.
Our supreme court has held a mental condition may be a mitigating circumstance even if it does not amount to a defense to a crime. See, eg., Gambill v. State,
. That sеction provides the State may seek either a death sentence or a sentence of life imprisonment without parole for murder by alleging, on a page separate from the rest of the charging instrument, the éxistence of at . least one aggravating «circumstance listed elsewhere in that section. "However, the state may not proceed against a defendant under this section if a court determines at a pretrial hearing under IC 35-36-9 that the defendant is a mentally retarded individual."
. Compare Ind.Code § 35-50-2-4 (thirty-year range for Class A felony) and Ind.Code § 35-50-2-5 (fourteen-year range for Class B felony) with Ind.Code §35-50-2-6 (six-year range for Class C felony) and Ind.Code § 35-50-2-7 (two-and-one-half-year range for Class D felony).
. See Ind. Appellate Rule 7(B).
