MEMORANDUM and ORDER
This matter is before the court on Charles Jess Palmer’s third amended petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Filing No. 44. Charles Jess Palmer has been on death row since 1979. He has been convicted of capital felony murder and sentenced to death three times under Nebraska’s Death Penalty Statute, Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2523. 1 The court has carefully re *1018 viewed the voluminous record in this case and the numerous submissions of the parties at this and earlier levels of the proceedings and now concludes that Charles Jess Palmer has been sentenced to death in violation of the United States Constitution.
I. Background
A. First Trial
Palmer was tried and convicted of first degree murder under a felony-murder theory in 1979 for the death of Eugene Zimmerman. The state’s case against Palmer in the first trial was based largely on circumstantial evidence. The evidence adduced at Palmer’s trial shows that Zimmerman was found murdered in his residence above his coin shop in Grand Island, Nebraska, on March 6, 1979.
State v. Palmer,
The evidence also shows that earlier in the day on March 6, 1979, “C. Palmer” had received a ticket for an equipment violation at a highway checkpoint nine miles south of Hastings, Nebraska, which was midway between Grand Island, Nebraska, and Guide Rock, Nebraska, where Palmer was living at the time of the murder.
Palmer I,
The evidence adduced at the trial further shows that law enforcement authorities were later alerted to Palmer’s whereabouts when a coin dealer in Austin, Texas, contacted the police after he purchased several items from Palmer, including items that had been stolen from Zimmerman’s coin shop.
3
Palmer I,
313
*1019
N.W.2d at 651-652; Trial I Tr., Vol. IV at 577, 580, 586-587. The police instructed the coin dealer to call them if Palmer were to initiate contact again.
Palmer I,
The jury returned a guilty verdict. Pursuant to the Nebraska death penalty statute in effect at the time, Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2521, a three-judge panel conducted a sentencing hearing. At the sentencing hearing, the prosecutor sought to apply two statutory aggravators under Neb.Rev. Stat. § 29-2523. 4 Trial I Tr., Vol. VIII at 985. The prosecutor argued: (1) that the murder had been “committed in an apparent effort to conceal the commission of a crime, or to conceal the identity of the perpetrator of the crime,” under Neb.Rev. Stat. § 29 — 2523(1) (b); and (2) that the murder was “especially heinous, atrocious, cruel, or manifested exceptional depravity by ordinary standards of morality and intelligence” under Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2523(l)(d). Id. Palmer’s counsel conceded the applicability of the “murder to conceal crime” aggravator, stating, “I have no qualms with [the prosecutor’s] conclusion with regard to subparagraph ‘b.’ I think there is obvious evidence in the record that you could justify that.” Trial I Tr., Vol. VIII at 988.
A three-judge sentencing panel sentenced Palmer to death, as provided in Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2520 (1980). Nebraska v. Palmer, No. 30-011, Hall Co. Clerk’s Rec. (“St.Ct.File”), Vol. I at 173-83, Order of Sentencing (Aug. 27, 1980). The sentencing panel found that both aggravating factors applied. It found no mitigating circumstances applied and noted that “the defendant in this case has stood mute and offered no evidence of any mitigating circumstance whether or not such mitigating *1020 circumstance was described by the statute.” 5 Id. at 181.
Palmer’s first conviction and sentence were reversed on appeal.
Palmer I,
B. Second Trial
Palmer was retried in 1982 and was again convicted. Between the first and second trials, Cherie Palmer, Charles Palmer’s wife, had filed for divorce in Texas. The prosecutor sought to use her testimony at the second trial since it would no longer be barred by Nebraska’s statutory ban on testimony by a spouse. Trial II Tr., Vol. I at 25-26. He successfully moved for a continuance of the trial once. Id. at 50. The divorce was granted in Texas on March 12,1981, and the prosecutor moved for a second continuance in anticipation of an appeal of the divorce decree. Id. at 55; Ex. 1. The trial court overruled the second motion and the case proceeded to trial. Id.
The evidence adduced at the second trial again circumstantially linked Palmer to the murder. Importantly, Cherie Palmer’s testimony was admitted over an objection that it violated spousal immunity. Id., Vol. II at 292-93. She testified that she, Charles Palmer, and their child traveled to Grand Island on March 6, 1979, to sell some diamond rings to Zimmerman. Id. at 309-11. She went on to testify essentially that Palmer murdered Zimmerman. Id. at 312-23. According to Cherie Palmer, Charles Palmer hit Zimmerman and took him upstairs. Id. at 314-16. She later heard a thump and a “course sounding voice ... a chant sort of voice.” Id. at 320. Cherie Palmer’s testimony was thus the strongest evidence that linked Palmer to the murder. 6
A three-judge panel again sentenced Palmer to death, finding the same two aggravators that were found in the first trial. St. Ct. File, Vol. II at 419-34, Order of Sentence (July 19,1982).
Palmer’s second conviction was also reversed on direct appeal.
State v. Palmer,
C. Federal Pretrial Double Jeopardy Challenge
Before his third trial Palmer filed a
pro se
action in federal district court raising an ex post facto and double jeopardy challenge.
See Palmer v. Clarke,
No. 4:84CV144, Filing No. 1, Petition for Ha-beas Corpus Relief (D.Neb. Feb. 29, 1984) (“Fed.Ct.File”). He contended that both his second trial violated double jeopardy and his impending trial would violate double jeopardy because the evidence, excluding inadmissible evidence, was insufficient to convict him in either the first trial or the second trial. He sought a stay to prevent the state from trying him again because a finding of insufficient evidence would amount to an acquittal and would trigger double jeopardy protections.
Id.
The federal district court first dismissed the claim as premature.
Id.
at Filing No. 2 (D.Neb. March 1, 1984). That dismissal was reversed by the Eighth Circuit in
Palmer v. Drum,
No. 84-8041 (8th Cir. May 10, 1984) (unpublished opinion).
See
Fed. Ct. File at Filing No. 8. The Eighth Circuit remanded the case to district court for reconsideration in light of the Supreme Court’s holding in
Justices of Boston Mun. Ct. v. Lydon,
Palmer again appealed to the Eighth Circuit. Meanwhile, because the federal district court had denied Palmer’s motion for a stay,
id.
at Filing No. 15, Palmer was tried and convicted for the third time in June 1984. The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals held the action in abeyance pending resolution of all proceedings in the Nebraska state courts.
See Palmer v. Grammer,
On remand, Palmer amended his petition and added the allegation that Cherie Palmer’s testimony at the second trial should not be considered in determining sufficiency because the testimony had been procured through prosecutorial and judicial misconduct. Fed. Ct. File, Filing No. 22. The district court concluded that the evidence (including the improperly admitted evidence) in the first and second trials was sufficient to support Palmer’s first and second convictions. Id., Filing No. 55, Rept. & Rec. of Mag. Judge (D.Neb. May 25, 1990); Filing No. 57, Order Adopting Rept. & Rec. of Mag. Judge (D.Neb. Sept. 17, 1990). The district court did not ad *1022 dress the prosecutorial misconduct allegations because it found the claim was outside the scope of the remand. Id., Filing No. 46 at 1, Mem. and Order Granting Protective Order (D.Neb. Sept. 11, 1989).
Palmer again appealed and the Eighth Circuit again remanded.
Palmer v. Clarke,
The federal district court held an evi-dentiary hearing on February 24, 1993.
See
Fed. Ct. File, Filing No. 87, Tr. of Feb. 24, 1993, Hearing (Hrg. Tr.). Attorney Stephen Von Riesen, who prosecuted Palmer at the second trial, testified that he had tried to determine Cherie Palmer’s marital status in order to introduce her testimony in the second Palmer trial. Hrg. Tr. at 19. He had successfully moved to continue the trial once, before the divorce was final.
Id.
at 22, 23. The Palmers’ divorce was granted in Texas on May 12, 1982, and Von Riesen had filed for another continuance on May 25, 1982, assuming that an appeal of the divorce decree could prevent Cherie from testifying.
Id.
at 36-37. Von Riesen also testified that he had known Cherie Palmer’s testimony would be significant, if not essential, in the absence of Deanna Klintworth’s testimony.
Id.
at 43. He also testified that the trial judge had informed, ex parte, before the trial, that Cherie Palmer would be allowed to testify.
Id.
at 49. He also testified, however, that he had been satisfied that a competent legal argument could be made that Cherie Palmer’s testimony was admissible, and that he had not offered her testimony knowing that it would be inadmissible.
Id.
at 60. The district court found that no prosecutorial or judicial misconduct had occurred and that Cherie Palmer’s testimony should be considered in determining the sufficiency of the evidence.
See
Fed. Ct. File, Filing Nos. 89 and 97. It further found the evidence sufficient to support the conviction.
Id.,
Filing No. 89 at 12; Filing No. 97 at 6. That decision was ultimately affirmed.
See Palmer v. Clarke,
D. Third Trial
As noted, Palmer was tried, convicted, and sentenced to death for the third time in 1984. Cherie Palmer again testified and provided the only direct evidence linking Palmer to the murder. She testified that she and her husband and their child went to Zimmerman’s coin shop on March 6, 1979, to sell jewelry. Trial III Tr., Vol. II at 477. Charles Palmer hit Zimmerman, knocking him to the floor, and asked him for money. Id. Palmer then shoved Zimmerman up the stairs, where the two remained for fifteen minutes. Id. at 482. Cherie Palmer went upstairs and observed Zimmerman lying on a bed with his hands and feet tied. Id. at 483. Charles Palmer rummaged through drawers looking for jewelry. Id. at 484-85. Zimmerman said his stomach hurt. Id. at 484. Cherie Palmer offered to get him some medicine *1023 and then gave him some Valium. Id. Charles Palmer then told Cherie Palmer to go downstairs. Id. at 486. She testified that shortly thereafter “there was a — a lot of thumping noises. Thump, Thump, Thump, Thump, and some kind of a — a guttural noise. I kept hearing a — a low, monotonous, almost a chant — like sound. A very deep and very throaty guttural type, over and over, again.” Id. Cherie Palmer further testified that Charles Palmer came back downstairs after about fifteen minutes and then Charles, Cherie, and the child left the house. Id. Cherie testified that she told Palmer, “Charlie, Mr. Zimmerman knows who we are.” Id. at 490. Cherie also testified that they had been to see Mr. Zimmerman on about five previous occasions and that she had entered into a plea bargain and had spent 18 months in jail. Id. at 513.
Dr. Pierce T. Sloss, a pathologist, testified that he conducted a postmortem examination on Eugene Zimmerman’s body. Id. at 575. Dr. Sloss first “observed tightly encircled about the neck of the decedent an electrical cord.” Id. at 576. He testified that his examination of Zimmerman’s body revealed that
the voice box and the windpipe immediately below where the cord, electrical cord had been encircled around the neck were broken and bleeding had taken place into these broken structures and about these broken structures. A large amount of blood had been entrapped in the blood vessels of the head above the level of the encircling cord.
Id. at 577. He also observed that “the face contained multiple bruises and several broad scratches and a fresh cut” and “there was a fresh bruise just below the left collar bone.” Id. He opined that “death was due to strangulation and that death occurred approximately at 4:30 on the afternoon of the 6th day of March, 1979.” Id. He further noted that there was no postmortem evidence that the victim’s hands had been bound and that there were no stomach contents consistent with medication to be given within a half hour of death. Id. at 578-9. Monica Zimmerman’s testimony identified Charles Palmer as the man who had attempted to sell coins and jewelry at their store on previous occasions. Id. at 453-54.
The defense argued that it was equally likely that Cherie Palmer had murdered Zimmerman. Trial III Tr., Vol. IV at 822-30. Defense counsel argued that Charles Palmer, 'because of his size and strength, would have had no reason to use an electrical cord to strangle Zimmerman; he could have done so with his bare hands. Id. at 827.
At the close of evidence, the court instructed the jury that Palmer had been charged as follows: “On or about the 6th day of March, 1979, in Hall County, Nebraska, the Defendant Charles Jess Palmer, then and there being, did in the perpetration of a robbery, kill Eugene Zimmerman....” Instruction No. 2, St. Ct. File, Vol. IV at 758. With respect to the elements of the crime, the court instructed the jury that:
1. On or about the 6th day of March, 1979, in Grand Island, Hall County, Nebraska, the defendant Charles Jess Palmer did kill one Eugene William Zimmerman in the following manner:
a. That the defendant strangled the said Eugene William Zimmerman; and
b. That the strangulation was the proximate cause of the death of the said Eugene William Zimmerman; and
2. That said killing was done while the said Charles Jess Palmer was in the perpetration of a robbery.
Instruction No. 6, St. Ct. File, Vol. IV at 762.
*1024 The jury was further instructed that an element of robbery was “that such taking was done with intent to rob or steal.” Id. (emphasis added). With respect to intent, the jury was instructed that “criminal intent is a material and necessary element of the crime of First Degree Murder as charged against the defendant. But the intent required is not an intent to kill Eugene William Zimmerman but is an intent to deprive him of money or personal property of value.” Instruction No. 7, St. Ct. File, Vol. IV at 764.
A three-judge panel conducted a sentencing hearing. Trial III Tr., Vol. V (May 25, 1984, and September 6, 1984). At the hearing, defense counsel presented evidence of convictions and sentences in other murder cases. See Trial III, Ex. 62 (State v. Schaeffer); Trial III, Exs. 63, 64, and 65 (State v. Roewert); Trial III, Exs. 66, 67, and 68 (State v. Floyd); Trial III, Exs. 71 and 72 (State v. Thornton); Trial III, Ex. 73 (State v. Lynch); Trial III, Ex. 74 (State v. Jones). Cherie Palmer’s conviction and sentence were also offered into evidence. Trial III, Ex. 76. The sentencing panel also admitted Palmer’s presen-tence investigation report and Palmer’s response thereto. Trial III, Ex. 55 and Ex. 77. In mitigation, defense counsel offered a statement of Palmer’s sister showing that Palmer had a turbulent childhood and had been subjected to abuse by his stepfather. Trial III, Ex. 75. With respect to the “murder to conceal identity” aggravator, Palmer’s attorney argued that the ag-gravator amounted to “impermissible doubling up,” id., but he did not argue that the aggravator was inapplicable. Trial III Tr., Vol. V at 933. In response, the prosecutor argued that family history should not remain a mitigating circumstance “into middle age.” Id. at 922. On September 6, 1984, the panel sentenced Palmer pursuant to Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2522. 7 The panel found that the statutory aggravators of “murder to conceal identity” and “manifesting exceptional depravity,” Neb.Rev. Stat. § 29-2523(l)(b) and (d), applied to the case, but found no mitigating circumstances. 8 St. Ct. File at 177-78, Order of Sentence (Sept. 6, 1984). The court stated that the evidence relating to Palmer’s childhood and the abusive conduct of Palmer’s stepfather toward the defendant, his sister, and his mother “does not give rise to a mitigatory circumstance.” Id. at 181. In support of aggravator 1(b), the panel stated:
*1025 The evidence is that the defendant and his wife, Cheri Hanson Palmer, had been at the home of the decedent, which was also his place of business, on previous occasions and were known to both the decedent and his wife. The robbery was in large part completed prior to the killing of Eugene D. Zimmerman by defendant.
Id. at 177. In support of the exceptional depravity aggravator the sentencing panel stated,
Death in this case was caused by strangling. To accomplish the strangling the defendant employed an electrical cord which was wrapped around the neck of the victim and so tightened as to fracture the windpipe of the victim and to cause his death by suffocation. The evidence does not indicate that the act of killing itself was prolonged or lengthy so as to rise to the level of being ‘especially’ heinous, atrocious or cruel when compared with other cases of murder in the first degree.
The evidence further indicates, that, in the course of the robbery and the disabling of the victim in connection with the robbery the victim had been removed from the location at which a weapon had been available to him; had been bound with his hands behind his body; had been struck about the head sufficiently to knock him to the floor; and had been placed in a condition of inability to resist or otherwise to threaten the defendant.
Id. at 178-79. The panel again sentenced Palmer to death. Id. at 182-83.
The panel also stated that the murder was comparable to one committed by Wesley Peery. 9 Id. at 179. The panel also stated, without elaboration, that it had performed a proportionality review pursuant to Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2522(3), comparing the murder to all other murders committed since 1973, and found Palmer’s sentence proportionate. Id. at 182. The cases compared are not named.
1. Direct Appeal
Palmer’s third conviction was affirmed on direct appeal.
Palmer III,
Palmer also raised the issue of the constitutional validity of the “exceptional depravity” aggravator in his direct appeal. Id. at 713. The court first noted that “exceptional depravity” had been defined in earlier cases to mean “totally and senselessly bereft of regard for human life.” Id. at 729-30. The court then compared Palmer’s crime to several eases in which *1026 such “exceptional depravity” had been found. 10 Id. It set forth several “objective factors” to distinguish a death penalty case from a ease where the death penalty is not imposed and adopted a five-factor test to determine whether “exceptional depravity” existed.
[F]or the purpose of [applying] § 29-2523(l)(d) as an aggravating circumstance in determining whether the death penalty may be imposed, we hold that “exceptional depravity” in a murder exists when it is shown, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the following circumstances, either separately or collectively, exist in reference to a first degree murder: (1) apparent relishing of the murder by the killer; (2) infliction of gratuitous violence on the victim; (3) needless mutilation of the victim; (4) senselessness of the crime; or (5) helplessness of the victim.
Id.
at 731-32 (adopting the factors set forth in
State v. Gretzler,
The court also conducted a proportionality review as required by Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2521.03.
11
Over a vigorous dissent by then-Chief Justice Krivosha,
Palmer III,
2. State Court Post-Conviction Proceedings
Palmer then filed an action for post-conviction relief in Hall County, Nebraska, District Court. An evidentiary hearing was held on June 19, 1995. St. Ct. File, Transcript of Post-Conviction Hearing at 10 (“PosWConv.Hrg.Tr.”). At the hearing, Palmer elicited the testimony of John A. Wolf, the attorney who had been appointed lead counsel to represent Palmer in his first trial. Id. A young lawyer in his office, Jerry Milner, was appointed co-counsel. Id. at 11. Wolf testified that at the time he was appointed, he had never defended a murder trial. Id. at 8. Wolf had never participated in a capital sentencing procedure before the sentencing hearing in Palmer’s first trial. Id. at 18.
Wolf testified that he had read and researched the statute regarding aggravating and mitigating factors, but had not *1027 consulted with any other counsel. Id. at 18-19. With respect to mitigating factors, he stated, “I know I went over them with Charlie [Palmer] and asked him if any of those applied.” Id. at 17. He further testified that he did not think he presented any evidence regarding mitigating circumstances, because he “wasn’t aware of any mitigating” factors. Id. at 18. He did not recall whether he had conceded the existence of the aggravator that the murder had been committed to conceal another crime under section 29 — 2523(l)(b), but stated that if he had it was because “it was pretty obvious.” Id. at 19-20.
He did not recall whether he challenged the sufficiency of evidence to support the death penalty on Palmer’s direct appeal after the first trial, id. at 20, but the record shows he did not. See Brief of Appellant, Palmer I. Moreover, he did not object to Cherie Palmer’s statements in the presentence investigation report on the ground of marital privilege because he thought it would not have “done much good.” Post-Conv. Hrg. Tr. at 22. He further did not recall whether he had ever considered filing a plea in bar or other motion raising the double jeopardy issue before Palmer’s second trial. Id. at 23.
With respect to Palmer’s second trial, Wolf testified that he was assisted by attorney David A. Bush. Id. at 23. He testified that he knew that the state intended to call Cherie Palmer and that he knew what she would testify about from reading the presentence investigation in Palmer’s first trial. Id. at 24-25. He had not interviewed or deposed Cherie Palmer. Id. With respect to the sentencing phase in Palmer’s second trial, Wolf again testified that he did not recall putting on any evidence in mitigation “because I don’t think any applied.” Id. at 32.
Attorney Bush also testified at the post-conviction hearing. Id. at 45. He assisted Wolf in Palmer’s second and third trials. Id. He testified that he did “an extensive amount of investigation ... in the sense of legal briefing and the like” regarding the “heinous, atrocious and cruel and manifests exceptional depravity” aggravator, but did not do any investigation regarding the “murder committed to conceal identity” aggravator because he was “not sure what investigation would have been warranted.” Id. at 51. He further testified that he believed he had contacted Palmer’s sister to obtain evidence about Palmer’s turbulent childhood before the sentencing hearing in either the second or third trial. Id. at 53. The record shows that a statement by Palmer’s sister was admitted in the third sentencing hearing. See Trial III, Ex. 75. He also testified that before the sentencing hearing in the third trial, he had extensively investigated the proportionality review portion of the sentencing procedure by obtaining the records from other first degree murder cases. Id.
Ronald York, a probation officer, also testified at the post-conviction hearing. Id. at 59. He testified that he did the original and subsequent presentence investigation reports on Palmer. Id. at 61. He stated that the reports included a statement from Cherie Palmer. Id. at 62. He further testified that he did no investigation on any mitigating circumstances and that Palmer’s attorneys did not ask him to conduct any sort of investigation or to obtain any school or health records when preparing Palmer’s presentence investigation reports. Id. at 66-68. Further, he stated that he did not contact or consult any of Palmer’s friends, neighbors, or relatives, other than Cherie Palmer. Id. at 68. He did not interview Palmer while preparing the reports; he talked only to the attorneys who said that Palmer had nothing to say. “He was advised not to talk to me.” Id. at 66. The Hall County District Court denied the petition. St. Ct. File, *1028 Judge’s Notes & Journal Entries at 126-34 (Nov. 21,1995).
Palmer appealed the denial of post-conviction relief to the Nebraska Supreme Court. The Nebraska Supreme Court found that Palmer was not entitled to relief.
State v. Palmer,
The court addressed the merits of ten claims. With respect to Palmer’s claim that his conviction for felony murder was unconstitutional because there had been no finding of the requisite intent, the court found, without discussion, “[I]t is clearly established that a person may be convicted of first degree murder under a felony murder theory without violating his Eighth or Fourteenth Amendment rights.” Id. at 769. The court also rejected Palmer’s claim that amendment of the spousal privilege statute amounted to an unconstitutional bill of attainder. Id. at 770.
It also summarily rejected Palmer’s claim that the “exceptional depravity” ag-gravator was unconstitutionally vague. Relying on
Joubert v. Hopkins,
Palmer filed the present action on January 28, 2000, and now seeks habeas corpus relief pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Palmer contends that his 1984 conviction and sentence are unconstitutional and void under Article I, §§ 9 and 10, and under the Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution. All claims have been properly exhausted and no claims are proeedurally barred. See Filing No. 58, Mem. and Order (D.Neb. Sept. 14, 2001).
II. Discussion
A. Applicability of AEDPA— Standard of Review
Review by federal courts of state court decisions for constitutional errors under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 was altered by the Antiter-rorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (AEDPA), which became effective on April 24, 1996. A threshold question is the applicability of the AEDPA to Palmer’s action.
*1029 1. Second or Successive Petition
The AEDPA has further restricted the power of federal courts to grant writs of habeas corpus to state prisoners.
Miller-El v. Cockrell,
This court must thus determine whether Palmer’s present petition constitutes a second or successive petition. The court finds that it is not. Not every habe-as corpus petition that is filed after a prior one is properly considered a “second or successive” filing in the technical sense required by the AEDPA.
Muniz v. United States,
To hold that every refiled petition is second or successive under AEDPA “would mean that a dismissal of a first habeas petition for technical procedural reasons would bar the prisoner from ever obtaining federal habeas review.”
Martinez-Villareal,
a claim in no sense abusive, because it could not have been raised earlier, yet not within the dispensation that section 2244(b)(2) grants for the filing of some second or successive petitions, would have sufficient merit that the barring of it would raise an issue under the clause of the Constitution that forbids suspending federal habeas corpus other than in times of rebellion or invasion.
In re Page,
There is a substantive difference between a dismissal for failure to exhaust and a dismissal as premature or unripe. Palmer’s first habeas corpus petition was originally dismissed as premature and later as frivolous, but was never dismissed for failure to exhaust. This case is thus on the same procedural footing as the petitioner’s action in
Stewart v. Martinez-Villareal,
This action is Palmer’s first habeas corpus petition on all issues except the pretrial double jeopardy issue. Accordingly, the court finds that the action is not a second or successive petition and that 28 U.S.C. § 2244 does not apply to this case. 13
2. Substantive Standard of Review
The inquiry does not end at the finding that Palmer’s present petition is not second or successive. The court must still determine whether the AEDPA’s revised standards of review will apply to the action. “Whether a petition is a ‘second or successive’ application under the AEDPA is an entirely different question” than whether AEDPA applies to a petition filed after the Act’s effective date.
Weaver v. Bowersox,
Since the AEDPA does not apply retroactively to cases pending when the Act was signed into law,
14
the inquiry is whether Palmer’s action can be said to have been “pending” on April 24, 1996.
Lindh v. Murphy,
*1031 On the date the AEDPA was passed, Palmer had an action pending that raised issues on the merits. The petition in Palmer’s initial habeas petition sought resolution of the merits of the double jeopardy/sufficiency of evidence issue. The court resolved the pretrial component of that claim, but reserved judgment on the posttrial component, effectively finding the double jeopardy issue premature as to the completed third trial. The claims in the present petition, especially those that involve sufficiency of evidence at the first and second trials as part of Palmer’s ineffective assistance claim and the double jeopardy issues, are inextricably tied to claims raised in Palmer’s first petition.
Only Palmer’s pretrial double jeopardy challenge has been addressed on its merits. Palmer’s other claims, which involve challenges to his third conviction, as well as claims relating to his first and second trials, could not have been raised earlier. Most claims were premature, and Palmer was unable to raise his ineffective assistance of counsel claims because he was represented by the same counsel. In addition, because both the federal and state courts held Palmer’s actions in abeyance pending resolution of proceedings in the other court, the present petition is a continuation of the first and should relate back to the first. The lengthy delays in resolving the merits of Palmer’s claims can largely be attributed to actions (or inac-tions) by the courts. The court is thus inclined to view this action as a natural extension of the proceedings in Palmer’s first habeas corpus action, Palmer v. Drum, 84-L-144. 16
Accordingly, since Palmer’s action was pending, or is deemed to have been pending, when the AEDPA was passed, pre-AEDPA standards of review should apply. This finding is of no real consequence, however, because the court would reach the same conclusion under either the pre- or post-AEDPA standards of review. Although the AEDPA altered the substantive standards by which federal courts review state court determinations of law under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, those subtle distinctions would not affect the outcome of this action. This court’s findings generally relate to legal, not factual, issues.
Under pre-AEDPA standards, the reviewing court would give the state court’s factual findings a “presumption of correctness” and would review
de novo
state court interpretations of federal law, as well as mixed questions of fact and law.
See Jones v. Delo,
Under the AEDPA, a federal court may grant a writ of habeas corpus if the relevant state court decision is “contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1);
Lockyer v. Andrade,
“Clearly established federal law” under section 2254(d)(1) is the governing legal principle or principles set forth by the Supreme Court at the time the state court renders its decision and includes whatever would qualify as an “old rule” under the Supreme Court’s
Teague
jurisprudence.
17
Id.
at 411,
Also, under the AEDPA, factual determinations by state courts are presumed correct absent clear and convincing evidence to the contrary. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1). A decision adjudicated on the merits in a state court and based on a factual determination will not be overturned on factual grounds unless it is objectively unreasonable in light of the evidence presented in the state court proceeding.
Miller-El v. Cockrell,
537 U.S. at-,
The distinctions, then, are that the court must find factual error to have occurred by clear and convincing evidence and must find legal error to have occurred because the state court result was either contrary to Supreme Court precedent or because the state court unreasonably applied Supreme Court precedent. Even under the AEDPA’s marginally more rigorous standards, this court’s findings would be the same.
B. Merits of Petitioner’s Claims
1. Ex Post Facto (Claim I)
In his first claim, Palmer asserts that the amendment to the spousal privilege statute in 1984 operated as an ex post facto law in violation of the Constitution. In the state court post-conviction action, the Nebraska Supreme Court refused to consider this claim, stating that the court in
Palmer III
had raised and addressed it.
Palmer IV,
Article I, section 10 of the Constitution prohibits the states from passing any ex post facto law.
Carmell v. Texas,
Palmer’s contentions invoke the fourth prong of this definition.
See id.
at 531,
Not every rule that has an effect on whether a defendant can be convicted implicates the Ex Post Facto Clause.
Carmell,
The court finds the change to the spousal privilege statute is closer to a witness competency rule. The change did not affect the amount of evidence necessary to convict the defendant; it merely created a class of persons (spouses) competent to testify with respect to certain issues (crimes of violence).
See Janecka v. Cockrell,
Accordingly, the court finds that the amendment to the spousal privilege did not operate as an ex post facto law against Palmer.
2. Bill of Attainder (Claim II)
On a closely related issue, Palmer also argues that the passage of the spousal privilege amendment operated as a bill of attainder against him in violation of Article I, Section 10 of the Constitution.
18
The Constitution includes two clauses prohibiting enactment of “bills of attainder.”
See
U.S. Const. art. I, §§ 9, 10. Section 9 applies to Congress; section 10 to the states.
Id.
Briefly stated, a constitutionally proscribed bill of attainder is “a law that legislatively determines guilt and inflicts punishment upon an identifiable individual without provision of the protections of a judicial trial.”
Nixon v. Administrator of Gen. Servs.,
A statute can be a bill of attainder only if (1) it “determines guilt and inflicts punishment,” (2) “upon an identifiable individual,” (3) “without provision of the protections of a judicial trial.”
Nixon,
433
*1035
U.S. at 468,
The state post-conviction court found that Palmer was not subject to a bill of attainder because the amended statute did not specify persons to be punished.
The privilege, as amended, neither names specific persons or groups to be punished nor isolates past activity by which persons can later be designated as appropriate candidates for punishment. The amended spousal privilege is not concerned with distinguishing between persons, but between crimes. The amendment allowed spousal testimony to be admitted in future trials for violent crimes. Therefore, the amendment of § 27-505 was not a bill of attainder against Palmer.
Palmer IV,
Whether the challenged statutory amendment “specifies” Palmer, or singles him out, is a close question. The court is inclined to find that it does. Various guideposts aid in determining whether legislation singles out a person or class within the meaning of the Bill of Attainder Clause.
See, e.g., Selective Serv. v. Sys.,
Under those standards, this court finds that although the statute does not single out Palmer by name, his identity was easily ascertainable at the time the statute was amended. Palmer has presented compelling evidence that the bill was specifically aimed at him.
See
Legislative History, LB 696, Floor Debate (Jan. 17,1984). The bill’s introduction was occasioned by the reversals in
Palmer I
and
Palmer II.
The prosecutor in the second trial testified to the legislature in support of the amendment.
Id.
at 6.
Cf. WMX Tech., Inc. v. Gasconade County, Mo.,
However, even if the specificity element is satisfied, the Bill of Attainder Clause is not automatically implicated.
Nixon,
Traditionally, bills of attainder sentenced the named individual to death, imprisonment, banishment, the punitive confiscation of property, or erected a bar to designated individuals or groups participating in specified employments or vocations.
Nixon,
Legislation designed to guarantee the availability of evidence for use at criminal trials is a fair exercise of Congress’ responsibility to the ‘due process of law in the fair administration of criminal justice,’ and to the functioning of our adversary legal system which depends upon the availability of relevant evidence in carrying out its commitments both to fair play and to the discovery of truth within the bounds set by law.
Nixon,
The evidence presented by Palmer, while it may show prosecutorial over zealousness, does not rise to the level of proof of legislative intent to punish. There are legitimate justifications for the statutory amendment. Because Cherie Palmer’s testimony was pivotal, the legislative act furthered Palmer’s conviction and sentencing; however, the nexus between the amendment to the spousal privilege statute and Palmer’s conviction is attenuated, especially since the testimony eventually became “available” as a result of the Palm-ers’ divorce. The court thus finds that Palmer has not met his burden of showing that the amendment to the spousal privilege statute is a bill of attainder.
3. Double Jeopardy (Claim IX)
In his ninth claim, Palmer argues that the prosecutor’s actions in the second and third trials, coupled with the trial court’s erroneous admission of Cherie Palmer’s testimony, violated Palmer’s right not to be put in double jeopardy. Palmer argues that prosecutorial misconduct — conduct showing an intent to gain an unfair advantage at trial — which is analogous to “goading to mistrial,” prevented Palmer’s acquittal in the second trial. Consequently, Palmer’s argues that his third trial violated double jeopardy.
The state argues that Palmer is collaterally estopped from making this argument. The court first finds that Palmer is not. “The loss of a pretrial double jeopardy challenge on the merits
*1037
does not preclude a defendant from raising a double jeopardy challenge in a posttrial habeas petition.”
Palmer (Fed.) II,
Palmer’s argument in the present claim is that the misconduct amounts to or can be compared to a “goading to mistrial” situation.
See, e.g., Oregon v. Kennedy,
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment provides that no person shall be “twice put in jeopardy of life or limb” for the same offense. U.S. Const, amend. V. The Double Jeopardy Clause protects against a second prosecution for the same offense after acquittal, a second prosecution for the same offense after conviction, and multiple punishments for the same offense.
See Sattazahn v. Pennsylvania,
.Generally, the Double Jeopardy Clause will not bar retrial if a defendant requests a mistrial.
United States v. Din-
*1038
itz,
The argument in favor of such extension is that, without it, a prosecutor would have “an unimpaired incentive to commit an error that would not be discovered until after the trial and hence could not provide the basis for a motion for a mistrial, yet would as effectively stave off an acquittal and thus preserve the possibility of a retrial.”
Catton,
the prosecutor does not expect to prevail at this trial — the case in which he knows that his misconduct is likely to be discovered and that if it is discovered the verdict will be set aside either on direct appeal or, later, in a collateral attack on the conviction — and what he is seeking to obtain by committing a reversible error is the opportunity to retry a defendant who but for the error would be acquitted. In such a case, the prosecutor’s ultimate aim is not to obtain a conviction at this trial but to obtain a conviction at a subsequent trial....
Id.
Under this theory, a defendant asking a court to block a retrial on the basis of prosecutorial error must show
that the prosecutor committed the error because he thought that otherwise the jury would acquit and he would therefore be barred from retrying the defendant. It is not enough that there was an error; it is not enough that it was committed or procured by the prosecutor; it is not enough that it was deliberate prosecutorial misconduct; it must in addition have been committed for the purpose of preventing an acquittal that, even if there was enough evidence to convict, was likely if the prosecutor refrained from misconduct.
Id.
(emphasis in original). The Eighth Circuit has intimated that it would extend
Oregon v. Kennedy
in a proper case.
See Jacob v. Clarke,
This court is unwilling to extend the “goading to mistrial” principle to this situation. Palmer has presented compelling evidence that shows the prosecution knew that an acquittal (at the least of imposition of the death penalty) was likely in the absence of Cherie Palmer’s testimony. Evidence is lacking, however, on whether any prosecutorial misconduct, assuming it occurred, was deliberate and was undertaken for the purpose of preventing an acquittal. This court is bound by the finding that the trial judge and prosecutor did not know that Cherie Palmer’s testimony would be inadmissible in the second trial. Palmer argues, however, that there is evidence to support a finding that, although the prosecutor may not have known with certainty that the evidence was not admissible, he had a strong hunch that it would turn out to be barred, yet he *1039 presented the evidence anyway in hopes of gaining an advantage. The advantage was that Palmer’s divorce would be final on retrial and Cherie Palmer’s testimony could then be admitted. 20
Whatever the appeal of Palmer’s argument, finding a violation of double jeopardy in the circumstances of this case is too great a stretch. The court is bound by the Eighth Circuit’s earlier finding that no prosecutorial misconduct occurred. The circuit court affirmed the factual finding that the prosecutor did not know that Cherie Palmer’s testimony would be inadmissible when it was offered. There may be a subtle distinction between concrete, certain “knowledge” and what amounts to a suspicion, but the distinction is not clear enough for this court to find that the prosecutor’s “hunch” is enough on which to base an extension of the “goading to mistrial” concept. Accordingly, the court finds no double jeopardy violation on grounds of prosecutorial misconduct in Palmer’s third trial. 21
4. The Nebraska Death Sentencing Scheme (Claims III, IV, V, VI, VIII, XXII)
Palmer challenges the Nebraska death penalty sentencing scheme in several particulars. He first argues that the Nebraska Supreme Court’s method of proportionality review violates due process and the Eighth Amendment. He further argues that his due process rights were violated when the Nebraska Supreme Court resenteneed him under a different proportionality paradigm and a newly narrowed definition of “exceptional depravity,” thus denying him access to Nebraska’s two-tiered sentencing procedure. Palmer also argues that the reformulated definition of “exceptional depravity” that was set out in
Palmer III,
The question of whether a statute is constitutional is a question of law.
United States v. Prior,
Under the Nebraska death penalty scheme in force at the time of Palmer’s sentencing, the determination of whether the defendant should be sentenced to death or life imprisonment was made fol *1040 lowing a sentencing hearing by the judge who presided over the trial or accepted the guilty plea, or by a three-judge sentencing panel, after a hearing. Neb.Rev.Stat. §§ 29-2520, 29-2521. Aggravating and mitigating circumstances were listed in Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2523. See supra at note 4 and note 5. The trial judge or a three-judge sentencing panel was required to fix the sentence at either life or death and to determine: (1) whether sufficient aggravating circumstances existed to justify imposition of a sentence of death; (2) whether sufficient mitigating circumstances existed which approached or exceeded the weight given to the aggravating circumstances; and (3) whether the sentence of death was excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases, considering both the crime and the defendant. Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2522. The statute also provided for automatic review of any death sentence by the Nebraska Supreme Court. Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2525.
a. Proportionality Review
In Claims III, IV, and V, Palmer asserts he was deprived of Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights because the Nebraska Supreme Court failed to conduct a proper proportionality review. As noted, Nebraska’s death penalty scheme mandates automatic review of all cases where the death sentence is imposed. Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2525. Moreover, Nebraska law mandates that a proportionality review be performed at both the sentencing level and by the Supreme Court on mandatory review. Neb.Rev.Stat. §§ 29-2522(3), 29-2521.03.
The state again argues that Palmer raises only an issue of state law.
22
To the contrary, this court earlier found that Palmer raises a constitutional claim.
See
Filing No. 58, Mem. and Order at 4-5. The underlying constitutional principle embodied in the Nebraska death penalty scheme “is, that given the life interest at stake, the death penalty shall not be imposed without due process.”
State v. Reeves,
While the federal Constitution does not mandate a proportionality review, once one is in place it must be conducted consistently with the Due Process Clause.
Kilgore v. Bowersox,
Proportionality review satisfies due process when a state court compares the defendant’s case with other
similar
cases.
See Kilgore,
i. Proper Comparison
The Nebraska statute plainly requires “the Supreme Court to review and analyze
all
criminal homicides committed under the existing law in order to insure that each case produces a result similar to that arrived at in other cases with the same or similar circumstances.” Neb.Rev. Stat. § 29-2521.01 (Reissue 1985) (emphasis added). The purpose of the statute, “to compensate for the lack of uniformity in charges which are filed as a result of similar circumstances,” was expressed in legislative findings incorporated into the law. Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2521.01. The legislature then imposed an obligation on the Supreme Court to review and analyze all criminal homicides committed after April 20, 1973.
Palmer III,
This court agrees with then-Chief Justice Krivosha that
[t]he plain language of the act seems to make it clear that all criminal homicide cases are to be reported to the Supreme Court and that the Supreme Court, in conducting its review, is to look at all of these cases and to then compare the case on appeal with those other cases having same or similar circumstances, not penalties, to determine whether the imposition of the death penalty in the case on appeal is more severe than that imposed in other cases having same or similar circumstances.
Id. at 747 (emphasis added). Thus, the court finds the Nebraska Supreme Court majority erred in Palmer III when it ef *1042 fectively rewrote the statute to require comparison to other death sentences rather than to other “criminal homicides ” or at least to all other first degree murders. Moreover, because the statute created a liberty interest and a substantial and legitimate expectation that the statute would be followed, this error is of constitutional proportions and amounts to a denial of due process.
The statute, as interpreted by the Nebraska Supreme Court in
Palmer III,
Had a proportionality review been properly performed in Palmer’s case, as then-Chief Justice Krivosha observed in his concurrence and dissent, the result would have been fifty-seven robbery/murders to compare to Palmer’s crime, only six of which resulted in a sentence of death (10.5 percent as opposed to 89.5 percent of similar crimes that received a sentence of life). Id. at 752-53 (noting the similar cases “clearly exemplify that what Palmer did, while morally repugnant and deserving of the maximum punishment permitted by law, was really no different from what many others have done and for which they received a life sentence.”). Thus, the finding that Palmer’s death sentence was proportionate was error. The finding was not only incorrect but was an unreasonable application of Supreme Court precedent.
Accordingly, the statute, as interpreted, violates the maxim announced in
Godfrey v. Georgia,
ii. Two-Tiered Review
Palmer asserts that he was denied recourse to the two-tiered system when the Nebraska Supreme Court applied a different comparison in its proportionality review than the sentencing panel had. The sentencing panel compared Zimmerman’s murder to other first degree murders. On direct review, the Nebraska Supreme Court compared the murder to other cases in which the death penalty was imposed.
[I]n some of our prior decisions we have indicated that the proportionality review in all death penalty cases is a comparison of the facts and circumstances in all first degree murder cases, whether the penalty imposed was death or life imprisonment. Upon further consideration of this question we have concluded that the review should include only those cases in which the death penalty was imposed.
Palmer III,
This change in the comparison formula abrogated Palmer’s right to an automatic, mandatory review of the sentencing court’s proportionality analysis. The Supreme Court’s reformulated proportionality analysis was not subject to any review (save by this court). Palmer had a statutory right to: (1) have the sentencing panel conduct a proportionality review, and (2) have the determination of that sentencing panel reviewed in the Nebraska Supreme Court.
See, e.g., Rust v. Hopkins,
When the Nebraska Supreme Court re-sentenced Palmer using a different universe of defendants to determine proportionality than the sentencing panel had used, the Nebraska Supreme Court acted as an independent and unreviewable sentencing panel. This action deprived Palmer of a proper sentencing procedure in the trial court, an error comparable to that which led to reversals in
Rust v. Hopkins,
iii. Appellate Resentencing
Additionally, Palmer asserts that the failure of the Nebraska Supreme Court to conduct a proper proportionality
*1044
review amounts to impermissible “appellate resentencing” in violation of the Due Process Clause. This court agrees. As it had in
Rust,
“[t]he Nebraska Supreme Court did not merely ‘review’ the determinations of the sentencing panel, it effectively resentenced [the defendant] under a standard it had created that very same day.”
Rust v. Hopkins,
Supreme Court precedent requires appellate review of capital sentences to prevent unconstitutionally arbitrary and capricious infliction of the death penalty.
See Reeves v. Hopkins,
The court finds that the Supreme Court’s application of a different proportionality review to Palmer’s case than that applied by the sentencing court also amounted to prohibited appellate resen-tencing in violation of state law and consequently in violation of federal due process.
b. “Exceptional Depravity” Aggravator
i. Vagueness
Palmer asserts that the “exceptional depravity” prong of section 1(d) is unconstitutionally vague. When Palmer’s third conviction became final on October 5, 1987, 23 certain precepts of death penalty jurisprudence were clearly established.
In
Furman v. Georgia,
The Nebraska death penalty scheme, Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2519
et seq.,
was amended in 1973 by adding aggravating and mitigating factors to address the concerns expressed in
Furman. See
Neb. Rev.Stat. §§ 29-2519 to 29-2546 (Reissue 1995);
Palmer III,
The Eighth Amendment requires that state law define with reasonable specificity the circumstances in which the death penalty is to be imposed and articulate guidelines to provide a factfinder with principled means to distinguish a case in which the death penalty is appropriate from those cases in which it is not.
Maynard v. Cartwright,
A valid aggravating circumstance must not apply to every defendant convicted of a murder; it must apply only to a subclass of defendants convicted of murder, and it must reasonably justify the imposition of a more severe sentence on the defendant compared to others found guilty of murder.
Id.
at 877,
*1046
A sentencing decision must also be based on the facts and circumstances of the individual and his crime.
Zant,
The Nebraska Supreme Court has interpreted Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29 — 2523(l)(d) as having two components, which the word “or” divides.
See State v. Moore,
An aggravator similar to Nebraska’s “exceptional depravity” prong was found unconstitutional on its face for “standard-less and unchanneled imposition of death sentences in the uncontrolled discretion of a basically uninstructed jury.”
Godfrey,
The Nebraska Supreme Court had arguably narrowed the language of both prongs of § 29-2523(l)(d) in decisions that predated Palmer’s trial.
25
The Nebraska Supreme Court construed the “exceptional depravity” component of section 29-2523(l)(d) to encompass acts that are “so coldly calculated as to indicate a state of mind totally and senselessly bereft of regard for human life” or that encompass depravity so apparent “as to obviously offend all standards of morality and intelligence.”
See, e.g., State v. Harper,
In the direct appeal of Palmer’s third conviction, the Nebraska Supreme Court recited these definitions and adopted additional “objective factors,” such as those adopted by the Arizona Supreme Court in
State v. Gretzler,
“exceptional depravity” in a murder exists when it is shown, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the following circumstances, either separately or collectively, exist in reference to a first degree murder: (1) apparent relishing of the murder by the killer; (2) infliction of gratuitous violence on the victim; (3) needless mutilation of the victim; (4) senselessness of the crime; or (5) helplessness of the victim.
Palmer III,
Between Palmer’s direct appeal and his state court post-conviction action, the Eighth Circuit found the exceptional depravity prong, as narrowed in
Palmer III,
was unconstitutionally vague on its face.
Moore v. Clarke,
Recently, the Eighth Circuit rejected a vagueness and notice challenge to the constitutionality of the “exceptional depravity” prong as applied to a sentence of death imposed in 1995.
Moore v. Kinney,
*1048
The court finds the exceptional depravity prong of the statute is facially unconstitutional because it offers nothing objective as an “inherent restraint on the arbitrary and capricious infliction of the death sentence,”
Godfrey,
The court finds that at the time Palmer was sentenced in 1984 the Nebraska Supreme Court had not sufficiently narrowed the meaning of “exceptional depravity.” See id. at 1232 (finding insufficient narrowing with respect to 1980 sentencing). Similarly, the “exceptional depravity” prong had not been constitutionally narrowed at the time Palmer’s conviction became final in 1987. Accordingly, because there was nothing to guide the sentencing panel, the panel’s application of the vague aggravator to Palmer was error.
The court further finds that the Nebraska Supreme Court erred in
Palmer III
when it applied the
Gretzler
factors to Palmer’s case. Nothing in the exceptional depravity definitions that pre-dated Palmer’s sentencing foreshadowed the
Gretzler
factors. In
Palmer III,
the Nebraska Supreme Court used the following cases to illustrate that the five
Gretzler
factors were present in Nebraska cases that found “exceptional depravity”:
State v. Holtan,
The court is unable to see the connection between these cases and the factors set forth in
Gretzler.
Although
Peery
and
Holtan
involve robbery/murders, the facts of the Zimmerman murder equally resemble the facts in cases that pre-dated the sentencing in which application of the section 1(d) factor was rejected.
See State v. Rust,
Moreover, even if the
Gr-etzler
factors are valid, the facts of Palmer’s case do not support their application. On direct appeal, the court found the evidence supported application of the “helplessness” factor and the “infliction of gratuitous violence” factor.
Palmer III,
As noted in the discussion on the “exceptional depravity” aggravator, an aggra-vator is intended to narrow the class of murderers, creating a subclass of murderers who deserve the death penalty. The
*1050
Nebraska Supreme Court’s method would instead narrow the class of murderers, creating a subclass of robber/murderers. Robber/murderers are felony murderers, but the death, penalty cannot be imposed on every felony murderer; the class must be narrowed since capital crimes must reflect a consciousness materially more “depraved” than that of any person guilty of murder.
Godfrey,
defendant shot the female victim twice in the chest, dragged her into the bedroom, and then shot her four more times in the head for no apparent reason. He shot the male victim three times, and after his victim had fallen, shot him once more in the back. He then began kicking the male victim in the face repeatedly, at a time when the victim was already unconscious or dead.
Gretzler,
Helplessness as an aggravator ordinarily applies to the victim’s
status
as helpless
(i.e.,
age, infirmity, limited mental capacity, etc.), not to the fact of tying a victim up.
See, e.g., Arizona v. Zaragoza,
Although the Nebraska Supreme Court also found the Zimmerman murder “heinous,” the evidence does not support that finding, as construed to mean torture.
See State v. Rust,
ii. Lack of Notice
Palmer further asserts that the Nebraska Supreme Court’s post hoc construction of the aggravator deprived him of constitutional notice. The Nebraska Supreme Court’s “reformulation” of the aggravator occurred in his own direct appeal.
See Palmer III,
At the time Palmer was tried, convicted and sentenced, “exceptional depravity” had been defined to mean that either: (1) the victims were helpless or unresisting,
Holtan,
In some circumstances, a reviewing court can salvage a facially-vague aggravator by construing it to provide the sentencing body with objective criteria for applying the statute.
See Walton,
A post hoc sentencing scheme such as this denies defendants due process in the most basic sense, for they have no prior notice of the law to be used against them.
Accord, Osborne v. Ohio,
Moore III
does not alter this analysis.
Moore III
involved a resentencing in 1995. The requisite notice to Moore of the narrowed definition of “exceptional depravity” had been provided by the factors set out in
Palmer III,
along with the language of the statute,
pre-Palmer
constructions, the definition set out in
Joubert,
*1052 iii. Two-Tiered System
Palmer again asserts the Nebraska Supreme Court’s application of a different definition of exceptional depravity to the facts of his case than that applied by the sentencing panel denies him of his liberty interest in a two-tiered review and amounts to improper appellate resentenc-ing. The court finds that application of a reformulated aggravator by the Nebraska Supreme Court violated Palmer’s due process rights for the same reasons as application of a reformulated proportionality paradigm did. See discussion in section H(B)(4)(a)(ii).
iv. Appellate Reweighing
In a state where the sentencer weighs aggravating and mitigating circumstances, the weighing of an invalid aggravating circumstance violates the Eighth Amendment.
Espinosa v. Florida,
The court finds that the Nebraska Supreme Court’s application of an invalid aggravator to Palmer on direct review violates the Eighth Amendment. Moreover, any reweighing by the state post-conviction court in
Palmer TV
cannot cure the infirmity.
See Reeves,
5. Jury Finding of Aggravator (Claim XIII)
a. Applicability/Retroactivity of Ring
In
Ring v. Arizona,
New rules of substantive criminal law are presumptively retroactive.
See Santana-Madera v. United States,
There is no dispute that Palmer’s conviction became final well before the Supreme Court’s
Ring
decision was announced in 2002. Similarly, it cannot be seriously disputed that
Ring
announces a new rule. To determine “newness,” courts are directed to “survey the legal landscape as it then existed,” and to determine whether a court considering a petitioner’s claim at the time his conviction became final “would have felt compelled by existing precedent to conclude that the rule [he] seeks was required by the Constitution.”
Lambrix v. Singletary,
The substantive/procedural question, in turn, depends on an analysis of just what “new rule” can be gleaned from
Ring.
If
Ring
stands only for the proposition that every element of a crime must be submitted to a jury, as an extension of
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
Substantive rules determine the meaning of criminal statutes.
Bousley,
The importance of the distinction between substance and procedure in the habeas context is rooted in concern for the principal function of habeas corpus relief— to assure that no man has been incarcerated under a procedure that creates an im-permissibly large risk that an innocent man will be convicted.
Bousley,
In contrast, procedural decisions set forth fact-finding procedures to ensure a fair trial.
Sanders,
The court finds the
Ring
decision announces a substantive rule of criminal law and must be accorded retroactive effect.
See Bousley,
The holdings in each of these cases have been held to be retroactively applicable on collateral review.
See Bousley,
The Supreme Court’s holding in
Ring
altered the elements of the crime of capital murder.
Ring,
The distinction between actual innocence and innocence of the death penalty is of crucial significance to this analysis.
See Sawyer v. Whitley,
The Supreme Court’s holding in
Bousley
centers on the notion of actual innocence and reflects concern with the “impermissi-bly large risk that the innocent will be convicted.”
Bousley,
Cases holding that the Supreme Court’s holding in
Apprendi,
*1057
Ring
is all about substance. The Supreme Court explains that it has “interpreted the Constitution to require the addition of an element or elements to the definition of a criminal offense in order to narrow its scope.”
Ring,
This language indicates that
Ring
announces a new rule of substantive criminal law that must be retroactively applied to Palmer in this habeas corpus case. Under the principle announced in
Ring,
Palmer’s death sentence is constitutionally infirm. The Nebraska death penalty scheme, like the Arizona scheme at issue in
Ring,
exposes Palmer to a greater punishment than that authorized by the jury’s guilty verdict upon a judicial determination that an aggravating circumstance exists.
See id.
at 604,
5. Felony-Murder (Claims XIV and XV)
Palmer was charged and convicted of first degree felony murder under Neb. Rev.Stat. § 28-303 for killing during the course of a robbery. He contends that his sentence of death is constitutionally infirm because there is no finding of requisite intent and the jury should have been instructed on lesser-included offenses.
Under Nebraska law, a person commits first degree murder if he “kills another person (1) purposely and with deliberate and premeditated malice or (2) in the perpetration or attempt to perpetrate any sexual assault in the first degree, arson, robbery, kidnapping....” Neb.Rev.Stat. § 28-303. First degree murder is punishable by either life imprisonment or by death. Neb.Rev.Stat. § 28-105(1). The record shows that in the third trial, the court instructed the jury on the elements of felony murder as follows:
Criminal intent is a material fact and necessary element of the crime of First Degree Murder as charged against the defendant. But the intent required is not an intent to kill Eugene William Zimmerman but is an intent to deprive him of money or personal property of value.
Instruction No. 7, St. Ct. File, Vol. TV at 764. The court did not instruct the jury on any additional or specific showing of intent needed to impose the death penalty. In argument, however, the jury was made aware that Zimmerman’s murder was a capital offense. Trial III Tr., Vol. IV at 819, 830, 832. In response to Palmer’s claims in connection with the Nebraska felony murder statute, the state post-conviction court stated only that “a person may be convicted of first degree murder under a felony murder theory without violating his Eighth or Fourteenth Amendment rights.”
Palmer IV,
It was well established at the time of Palmer’s sentencing that the death penalty cannot be imposed on a defendant without a showing of some culpability
with respect to the killing itself. Enmund v. Florida,
*1058
Subsequent to Palmer’s sentencing and direct appeal, the Supreme Court held that the culpable mind-state for imposition of the death penalty in a felony murder case is reckless indifference to the value of human life.
Tison v. Arizona,
Under Nebraska law, felony murder differs from other murders because it requires no showing of any intent to kill.
State v. Reeves,
There has been no finding of any culpable mind-state at any stage of proceedings in this case. A jury finding of guilt of felony murder does not equate to a finding of intent.
Cabana,
In fact, the evidence adduced at the third trial would hátdly support a finding of deliberate intent to kill. There is a failure of proof on the entire mind-state issue. The evidence surely shows intent to commit the robbery, but without transfer of that intent to the murder, proof is lacking. The Constitution plainly requires an intent to kill in order for the state to impose the ultimate sanction of death.
Enmund,
This finding is supported by the Supreme Court’s analysis in
Ring,
Pre-Ring,
the Supreme Court stated, “ ‘[o]ur ruling in
Enmund
does not concern the guilt or innocence of the defendant — it establishes no new elements of the crime of murder that must be found by the jury’ and ‘does not affect the state’s definition of any substantive offense.’ ”
Hopkins v. Reeves,
Similarly, while felony murder exposes a defendant to life imprisonment, felony murder plus a finding of the requisite intent to kill exposes a defendant to the death penalty.
See, e.g., Ring,
6. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel (Claims XVI, XVII, XX, and XXI)
Palmer asserts ineffective assistance of counsel in four particulars. He asserts: (1) that counsel was ineffective in the sentencing phase of his first trial because counsel failed to object to the use of Cherie Palmer’s statement at the sentencing hearing; (2) counsel was ineffective in the direct appeal of his first trial by failing to raise and argue the improper admission of Cherie Palmer’s statement in the sentencing phase of his first trial; (3) counsel was ineffective in the sentencing phase of his first trial for conceding the existence of aggravator 1(b) of Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2523 (killing to conceal one’s identity); and (4) counsel was ineffective in the sentencing phase of his third trial in by failing to conduct any investigation into existence of mitigators and failing to interview Cherie Palmer before the sentencing.
In a federal habeas challenge to a state criminal judgment, a state court conclusion that counsel rendered effective assistance is not a finding of fact binding on the federal court to the extent stated by 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d); rather, it is a mixed question of law and fact.
Strickland v. Washington,
The Supreme Court established the legal principles that govern claims of ineffective assistance of counsel in
Strickland,
An ineffective assistance claim has two components: A petitioner must show that counsel’s performance was deficient, and that the deficiency prejudiced the defense.
Id.
To establish deficient performance, a petitioner must demonstrate that counsel’s representation “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.”
Id.
There are no articulated specific guidelines for appropriate attorney conduct.
Wiggins,
— U.S. -, -,
For counsel’s inadequate performance to constitute a Sixth Amendment violation, a petitioner must also show that counsel’s failures prejudiced his defense.
Id. “
‘To establish prejudice, a defendant must show that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.’ ”
Id.
The court finds that counsel’s concession of the 1(b) aggravator at the first trial is both objectively unreasonable and prejudicial to Palmer. Although a stipulation to an aggravator can be appropriate in some cases,
see, e.g., Hooker v. Mullin,
Concession of the aggravator, in the face of limited evidence to support its application, amounts to a constructive denial of counsel that justifies a presumption of prejudice.
See United States v. Cronic,
Counsel has a duty to conduct reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations unnecessary.
Wiggins,
— U.S. at -,
The court has no difficulty finding that counsel’s admitted failure in the first trial to investigate any statutory or non-statutory mitigating factors fell below an objective level of reasonableness.
See Wiggins,
— U.S. at -,
Having found deficient performance in counsel’s failure to investigate, the court must determine whether the deficient performance prejudiced Palmer’s defense. Since the alleged ineffective assistance of counsel occurred during the sentencing phase, this court considers whether there is a reasonable probability that, absent the errors, the sentencer would have concluded that the balance of aggravating and mitigating circumstances did not warrant death.
Wiggins,
Given the weakness of the legal and factual underpinnings of both aggravators, the court finds that there is a reasonable probability that the result would have been different if the factfinder had been adequately presented with any additional evidence in mitigation. There is evidence that with a proper investigation, counsel could have discovered additional evidence of Palmer’s troubled and difficult childhood. See, e.g., Ex. 75 (deposition of Palmer’s sister showing Palmer’s placement in a residential facility at age eighteen months and outlining physical abuse by stepfather). Counsel’s failure to do any investigation and his acquiescence to the information contained in the presentence investigation report is a serious deficiency. 38 The court finds a reasonable probability that additional evidence in mitigation would have influenced the sentencing panel’s appraisal of Palmer’s moral culpability. That reasonable probability undermines the court’s confidence in the outcome with respect to the sentence of death.
The court finds Palmer is thus entitled to habeas corpus relief for ineffective assistance of counsel in the penalty phases of both his first trial and his third trial.
*1063 7.Lack of a Speedy Trial (Claim X)
The Sixth Amendment guarantees the right to a speedy trial. U.S. Const, amend. VI;
Barker v. Wingo,
Courts use a four-part balancing test to determine whether an accused has been denied the right to a speedy trial under the Sixth Amendment. The factors to be considered in each case are: (1) the length of delay; (2) the reason for the delay; (3) the assertion of the right to speedy trial by the accused; and (4) the prejudice to the accused resulting from the delay.
Id.
at 530,
The court is unable to find that the seventeen-week delay in this case is presumptively prejudicial. Accordingly, the court finds this claim is without merit.
8.Unconstitutional Pretrial Photo Display (Claim XI)
Palmer contends that a pretrial photo display that was shown to Mrs. Zimmerman for identification was impermissibly suggestive because all of the individuals were shown standing next to a door frame, making Palmer, at the height of six feet, seven inches, stand out.
Courts use a five-point totality of circumstances test to determine reliability of an identification.
Neil v. Biggers,
Mrs. Zimmerman testified that she observed Palmer in her home on several occasions. Mrs. Zimmerman’s description included the approximate age and height of Palmer. She quickly identified Palmer from the photograph and was positive about the identification. Under the totality of the circumstances, Mrs. Zimmerman’s identification of Palmer was not unreliable as a matter of law. In addition, there is enough other evidence and testimony that lead to Palmer’s identification. Although Palmer was indeed taller than the others in the lineup, the court finds the photo display was not so striking or distinctive as to be impermissibly suggestive or to give rise to a substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification. Therefore, the court finds this claim lacks merit.
9.Wrongful Admission of Hypnotically-Induced Testimony (Claims XII and XIII)
Palmer contends that after the reversal of his first conviction because of erroneous admission of hypnotically-induced evidence, the hypnotically-induced recollections continued to taint the evidence in his later trials.
The Nebraska courts found error in the trial court’s admission of hypnotically induced testimony in the first trial as a matter of state law.
Palmer I,
313
*1064
N.W.2d at 653-54. The admissibility of evidence at trial is generally a matter of state law.
Clark v. Groose,
In the second and third trials, Monica Zimmerman’s testimony was limited to statements she had made prior to the hypnosis, and Deanna Klintworth’s identification testimony was barred altogether. The differences in the testimony before and after the “suggestive” hypnosis sessions are not that significant. For example, Monica Zimmerman thought Palmer was six feet two inches instead of six feet seven inches. Counsel was allowed to cross-examine on the effects of the hypnosis and presented evidence of its unreliability. The significance of the testimony of these witnesses pales in comparison to the damning evidence presented by Cherie Palmer.
The court therefore finds that, whatever the effect of hypnotically-induced recollections, the trial was not fundamentally unfair in this respect.
10. Illegal Arrest and Seizure (Claim XIX)
Palmer asserts that his warrantless arrest and seizure in Austin, Texas, violates the Fourth Amendment. The Fourth Amendment guarantees “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures,” and further provides that “no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. Probable cause to arrest exists at the moment when the facts and circumstances within an officer’s knowledge, of which he has reasonably trustworthy information, are sufficient to warrant a reasonable man to believe that an offense has been or is being committed.
Crane v. State,
In the present case, there is no dispute that the officers had probable cause to arrest Palmer. The crucial issue is whether the police should first have obtained a warrant. Texas law authorizes an arrest without a warrant under certain circumstances. Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. arts. 14.01-14.04. When a felony has been committed and the offender is about to escape, so that there is no time to procure a warrant, a peace officer may, without warrant, pursue and arrest the accused. Id.
Under the circumstances in this case, the police officers clearly had probable cause to arrest the defendant. The officers knew the coin dealer was meeting the defendant at the Austin airport, where they reasonably believed that there was the possibility of defendant’s immediate flight. The evidence shows that they did not have time to secure a warrant. The court finds a valid, warrantless arrest was made under the governing law. Id. The court finds that Palmer’s contention that he was arrested in violation of the Fourth Amendment lacks merit.
11. Death by Electrocution (Claim XVIII)
The court has determined that this claim is not yet ripe for resolution. Filing No. 58 at 8-9. In the interest of completeness, however, the court will briefly address the issue. Palmer was allowed to supplement the record on this claim. See Filing No. 62. Palmer has presented evidence from medical and scientific experts, electrocution witnesses, prison officials, coroner reports, protocols for Nebraska executions, and postmortem photographs of the three persons executed *1065 in Nebraska since 1972 (Willie Otey, John Joubert, and Robert Williams). See Filing No. 75, Jan. 24, 2002, Evidentiary Hearing Exs. 3-6, 8-21, 22A-D, 23-27. The court has reviewed his evidence. If this court were to reach the issue, it would find that Palmer’s evidence shows that death by electrocution violates the Eighth Amendment’s proscription against cruel and unusual punishment.
Protocols show that the present Nebraska electrocution procedure calls for application of 2450 volts of electricity for eight seconds, followed by application of 480 volts for twenty-two seconds, followed by a twenty-second pause, followed by a second application of 2450 volts for eight seconds and 480 volts for twenty-two seconds. Ex. 1 at 2, Ex. 5 at 3. Scientific expert testimony does not establish any scientific or medical reason for this procedure. Indeed, the purposeful twenty-second delay between applications of the current potentially allows the inmate to regain consciousness. Ex. 27 at 48-50; Ex. 25 at 62.
Coroner reports show that John Joubert suffered a four-inch blistering burn on the top of his head and blistering on both sides of his head above his ears. Ex. 17 at 1. Robert Williams had a “bubble blister” the size of a baseball on his left calf. Ex. 12 at 15-16. Williams’s postmortem exam also showed pronounced “charring” on both sides of the knee and on the top of the head. Ex. 19 at 2. An execution witness reported seeing smoke emanating from Williams’s knee and head. Ex. 20. at 6. Witnesses observed that Harold “Willie” Otey was still breathing after the first and second applications of electricity. Ex. 26 at 53. Expert medical testimony establishes that “charring” burns are fourth-degree burns, due to severity. Ex. 24 at 18. Burns on other parts of the inmate’s body can be caused by arcing due to the saline solution dripping from spots where electrodes are attached to the inmate’s skin. Ex. 24 at 23. Such burns are not necessary to cause death. Id. at 25.
Expert testimony provides no evidence that electrocution produces instantaneous unconsciousness. Id. Scientific expert testimony shows that there is no way to know what voltage is being delivered to the person being executed unless there is a voltage meter on the person. Ex. 24 at 25-31. The amount of current being delivered depends on the resistivity of human tissue; each type of tissue conducts electricity differently. Id. at 19-25. The skull shields the brain from electricity; certain evidence indicates that less than one-tenth of the current used in an electrocution goes to the brain. See Ex. 25 at 38; Ex. 26 at 48. Other expert testimony shows that merely because an inmate’s heart stops beating does not mean he or she has lost consciousness. See id. The pause in application of the current is likely more painful than a continuous jolt would be. Ex. 26 at 19. Moreover, autopsy examinations of persons executed in other jurisdictions show virtually no damage to the brain, thus indicating that the brain is likely not wholly incapacitated during a judicial execution. Ex. 26 at 46-47.
The Eighth Amendment provides that “excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor Cruel and Unusual Punishment inflicted.” U.S. Const, amend. VIII. Under the Eighth Amendment, unnecessary pain and suffering must be minimized when imposing the death penalty.
Wilkerson v. Utah,
“A penalty must also accord with ‘the dignity of man,’ which is the ‘basic concept underlying the Eighth Amendment.’ ”
Gregg,
In light of the evidence and “evolving standards of decency,” the court would find that a death penalty sentence imposed on a defendant in a state that provides electrocution as its only method of execution is an unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain. The evidence establishes that execution by electrocution is both cruel and unusual. The court would find that the medical, scientific, and photographic evidence shows that death by electrocution is neither quick nor painless. Nebraska’s procedure has the potential to increase the perception of conscious pain. The photographic and documentary evidence shows the procedure is barbaric. The evidence graphically illustrates the concerns of Justice Brennan that “death by electrical current is extremely violent and inflicts pain and indignities far beyond the ‘mere extin-guishment of life.’ ”
Glass v. Louisiana,
Nebraska is now the only state that authorizes death by electrocution as its only form of execution. However humane electrocution may once have seemed in comparison to earlier methods, such as hanging, the guillotine, or drawing and quartering, that is no longer the case.
See, e.g., Campbell,
The Cruel and Unusual Clause is given an “expansive and vital character.”
Weems v. United States,
Therefore, the court makes the factual finding that the evidence shows that electrocution is barbaric and unnecessary, and would find death by electrocution to violate the Eighth Amendment’s proscription against cruel and unusual punishment.
*1067 III. Conclusion
The finality and severity of a death sentence make it qualitatively different from all other forms of punishment.
See, e.g., Lockett v. Ohio,
The court finds that Palmer has been sentenced to death for capital murder in violation of the United States Constitution. Specifically, the court finds that Palmer’s sentence of death is invalid by reason of errors that amount to a violation of Palmer’s due process rights and rights guaranteed by the Sixth and Eighth Amendments. These errors cannot be cured by appellate reweighing or harmless error review.
See
discussion
supra
at sections II(B)(4)(a)(ii)
&
(iii); (B)(4)(b)(iii) & (iv); (B)(6). The numerous errors in the sentencing phases of Palmer’s three trials compel a finding that amounts to an “acquittal” of the death penalty for Palmer. The evidence essentially shows a failure of proof on the existence of additional facts, i.e., aggravators and intent, to justify the sentence of death. Palmer cannot be re-sentenced to death.
See Sattazahn,
In view of the circumstances and the length of time that Palmer has been on death row, the court finds his sentence should be commuted to life imprisonment.
Accordingly,
IT IS ORDERED:
1. The petitioner’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is granted.
2. The petitioner’s sentence of death is vacated.
3. The respondent shall either release the petitioner within ninety days of the date of this order, or commute the petitioner’s sentence to life in prison.
Notes
. In
Ring v. Arizona,
. Mracek testified that Charles Palmer was not the man he saw that day. Trial I Tr., Vol. VI at 892. He first identified Cherie Palmer as the woman, but later recanted that testimony. Id. at 887, 898.
. Before the trial, Palmer moved to suppress use of the seized items as evidence, including jewelry from Zimmerman’s store seized at the time of his arrest. The motion was denied.
Palmer I,
. Under the statute, aggravating circumstances are:
(1) Aggravating Circumstances:
(a) The offender was previously convicted of another murder or a crime involving the use or threat of violence to the person, or has a substantial prior history of serious assaultive or terrorizing criminal activity;
(b) The murder was committed in an effort to conceal the commission of a crime, or to conceal the identity of the perpetrator of such crime;
(c) The murder was committed for hire, or for pecuniary gain, or the defendant hired another to commit the murder for the defendant;
(d) The murder was especially heinous, atrocious, cruel, or manifested exceptional depravity by ordinary standards of morality and intelligence;
(e) At the time the murder was committed, the offender also committed another murder;
(f) The offender knowingly created a great risk of death to at least several persons;
(g) The victim was a public servant having lawful custody of the offender or another in the lawful performance of his or her official duties and the offender knew or should have known that the victim was a public servant performing his or her official duties;
(h) The murder was committed knowingly to disrupt or hinder the lawful exercise of any governmental function or the enforcement of the laws; or
(i) The victim was a law enforcement officer engaged in the lawful performance of his or her official duties as a law enforcement officer and the offender knew or reasonably should have known that the victim was a law enforcement officer.
The facts upon which the applicability of an aggravating circumstance depends must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2523.
. The statute also listed mitigating circumstances:
(2) Mitigating Circumstances:
(a) The offender has no significant history of prior criminal activity;
(b) The offender acted under unusual pressures or influences or under the domination of another person;
(c) The crime was committed while the offender was under the influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance;
(d) The age of the defendant at the time of the crime;
(e) The offender was an accomplice in the crime committed by another person and his or her participation was relatively mi-
(f) The victim was a participant in the defendant's conduct or consented to the act; or
(g) At the time of the crime, the capacity of the defendant to appreciate the wrongfulness of his or her conduct or to conform his or her conduct to the requirements of law was impaired as a result of mental illness, mental defect, or intoxication.
Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2523.
. Deanna Klintworth’s testimony was not admitted, and the testimony of Monica Zimmerman and Jim Mracek was limited under the Nebraska Supreme Court’s order on remand.
. At the time of Palmer's sentencing, that statute provided:
After hearing all of the evidence and arguments in the sentencing proceeding, the judge or judges shall fix the sentence at either death or life imprisonment, but such determination shall be based upon the following considerations:
(1) Whether sufficient aggravating circumstances exist to justify imposition of a sentence of death;
(2) Whether sufficient mitigating circumstances exist which approach or exceed the weight given to the aggravating circumstances; or
(3) Whether the sentence of death is excessive or disproportionate to the penalty imposed in similar cases, considering both the crime and the defendant.
In each case in which the court imposes the death sentence, the determination of the court shall be in writing and shall be supported by written findings of fact based upon the records of the trial and the sentencing proceeding, and referring to the aggravating and mitigating circumstances involved in its determination.
Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2522.
. The sentencing panel also found that the jury "found the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree on the charge set out in the Information that he did willfully and purposely kill Eugene D. Zimmerman while in the commission of the act of robbing Eugene D. Zimmerman of property of value." St. Ct. File at 176 (emphasis added). To the contrary, the record shows the jury made no such finding.
. That murder also involved a robbery at a rare coin shop.
State v. Peery,
. The Nebraska Supreme Court compared Zimmerman's murder to murders committed by Richard Holtan, Erwin Charles Simants, Wesley Peery, Willie Otey, Steven Roy Harper, Carey Dean Moore, and Randall Reeves, all of whom had been sentenced to death.
Palmer III,
. That statute provided that ''[t]he Supreme Court shall, upon appeal, determine the propriety of the sentence in each case involving a criminal homicide by comparing such case with previous cases involving the same or similar circumstances.” Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2521.03 (emphasis added). It further provided the Supreme Court with authority to reduce sentences found to be greater than sentences imposed in the same or similar circumstances. Id.
. This action effectively adopted the findings made in Palmer III on these issues.
. The significance of this holding is that Palmer's claim is exempt from the restriction that a new rule such as that announced in
Ring v. Arizona,
. The explicitly retroactive provisions for death penalty cases set out in 28 U.S.C. § 2261(b) and (c) do not apply to this case.
See Hunter v. Bowersox,
.The Eighth Circuit’s holding that "AED-PA’s provisions apply to all habeas corpus petitions filed after the Act’s effective date,”
Weaver v. Bowersox,
. Principles of equitable tolling and relation back support this interpretation.
See Marsh v. Soares,
.
Teague v. Lane,
. This argument is also connected to Palmer's ineffective assistance of counsel claim. Palmer argues that his counsel's failure to make this argument in his direct appeal amounted to ineffective assistance. The Nebraska Supreme Court found that Palmer could not show prejudice caused by counsel’s lack of argument, since it found that the amendment was not a bill of attainder.
Palmer IV,
. Palmer now argues, in connection with both his posttrial double jeopardy challenge and his ineffective assistance of counsel claim, that the evidence from the third trial is insufficient to convict him of a crime eligible for the death penalty. There has been no decision on that issue that must be afforded preclusive effect.
. The fact that this was a capital case lends some credence to Palmer’s theory- Palmer’s evidence shows that it was likely that he would not have been sentenced to death without Cherie Palmer's testimony. Even if double jeopardy would not have barred a retrial, it would have barred a death sentence if Palmer had been sentenced to life in the second trial.
See Sattazahn v. Pennsylvania,
. This is not to say that the evidence was sufficient in the first and second trials to support the death penalty. See discussion later in this opinion in connection with Palmer's ineffectiveness of counsel claims.
. This court rejected that contention in its earlier order in this case, and characterized the state's argument in this regard as "border[ing] on the frivolous” and ''absurd.” See Filing No. 58, Mem. and Order at 4-5.
. The date the U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari to Palmer's direct appeal of his conviction.
See Penry v. Lynaugh,
. This vagueness challenge, based on
Godfrey,
. Although the term “especially heinous, atrocious, and cruel” was found unconstitutionally vague in
Maynard v. Cartwright,
. Walton
was partially overruled on other grounds by
Ring v. Arizona,
. That principle has been called into question in the advent of
Ring. Valerio v. Crawford,
. The later rehabilitation of the invalid factor applied to a 1995 resentencing and does not affect the finding that the aggravator had not been sufficiently narrowed before Palmer's conviction was final.
Cf. Moore III,
. The federal district court later found the "exceptional depravity” prong was constitutionally infirm as applied in Holtan’s case because of the lack of consistency in its application by the Nebraska Supreme Court.
Holtan v. Black,
CV84-L-393, slip op. at 29,
.The death penalty affirmed in
State v. Simants,
. Harper's sentence was affirmed based on the ''heinousness” prong, not the "exceptional depravity” prong of Neb.Rev.Stat. § 29-2523(l)(d).
Harper v. Grammer,
. Reeves's sentence of death was ultimately reversed because the Nebraska Supreme Court's resentencing, without a remand to the sentencing panel for determination of the existence of the mitigating factor of intoxication, violated Reeves's due process rights.
State v. Reeves,
.Also, the facts more closely resemble the crimes in cases that Palmer presented to the sentencing panel in support of the proportionality review. Each of those defendants had been charged and convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment or a term of years. See Ex. 62 (Schaeffer); Exs. 63-65 (Roewert); Exs. 66-68 (Floyd); Exs. 70-72 (Thorton); Ex. 73 (Lynch); and Ex. 74 (Jones).
. The state has not raised any procedural bar defense to the Apprendi/Ring claim. See Filing No. 58 at 2.
. Similarly, the Eighth Circuit's recent declaration that
Ring
is not retroactive applies only to a second or successive petition and
*1053
does not apply to this case.
See Moore III,
. Some courts regard this as a threshold inquiry, finding that
Teague
only comes into play where the new rule is procedural rather than substantive.
See United States v. Barajas-Diaz,
. These are: (1) if a new procedural rule places an entire category of primary conduct beyond the reach of the criminal law; or (2) if it is a "watershed rule of criminal procedure” that is necessary to the fundamental fairness of the criminal proceeding.
Teague,
. Although Cherie Palmer's statement in the presentence investigation report could most likely be considered in sentencing, the problem is counsel’s failure to produce any evidence to rebut her statements or to attack her credibility. Significantly, counsel additionally failed to present any evidence that was in any way favorable to Palmer.
