OPINION
William Charles Payton raped and murdered Pamela Montgomery in the early hours of the morning on May 26, 1980. She had been stabbed twelve times, six of the wounds in a line from Montgomery’s stomach to her groin. After that he re
Payton was convicted of the first degree murder and rape of Pamela Montgomery, and the attempted murders of Patricia and Blaine Pensinger. He was sentenced to death. The California Supreme Court affirmed on direct appeal and on habeas review.
People v. Payton,
The three-judge panel reversed on the factor (k) issue, and affirmed on Payton’s claims that his counsel rendered ineffective assistance in failing to investigate and present evidence about his personal, family, and mental background and to pursue the background of a jailhouse informant during the penalty phase; that prosecutorial misconduct offended due process; and that he received inadequate funds to develop defenses and investigate informants.
Payton v. Woodford,
On remand, Payton sought to relitigate several issues that the district court (and the three-judge panel) had previously decided. The district court believed that it could rehear previously adjudicated claims, but saw no convincing reason to do so. It addressed the “remaining claims” that had not been resolved, denying each and thus, denying relief on Payton’s petition. The court granted a certificate of appealability (COA) on Claim IV(C)(15), which challenges the constitutionality of California’s lethal injection protocol.
In addition to the certified issue, Payton appeals what he calls two “procedural issues” and two uncertified issues. The “procedural issues” arise out of Claim IV(A)(4) — whether counsel rendered ineffective assistance in the penalty phase for failure to investigate and present evidence of social history — and Claim IV(B)(1)— whether the prosecution’s failure to dis
We consider all claims as if they were properly before us. We dismiss the challenge to California’s lethal injection protocol as premature, and otherwise affirm the judgment.
I
Payton’s habeas petition claims that California’s lethal injection protocol amounts to cruel and unusual punishment. The protocol in place when his petition was filed was revised on May 15, 2007. In turn, that protocol was invalidated because it failed to comply with applicable procedural requirements.
Morales v. Cal. Dep’t of Corrs. & Rehab.,
II
The parties dispute what was before the district court on remand, and whether it abused its discretion in refusing to consider two claims. Regardless, considering all of Payton’s arguments and evidence proffered in support, we conclude that both claims fail on the merits.
A
First, Payton contends that trial counsel, James Merwin, failed to conduct an adequate investigation and to present sufficient mitigation evidence to individualize and humanize him or to explain his background to the jury in the penalty phase. We disagree.
One mental health expert had evaluated Payton before Merwin took over Payton’s defense; Merwin then consulted two additional mental health experts, Dr. Ernest Klatte and Dr. Edward Kaufmann, before trial. They found that Payton was intelligent, had no evidence of organic brain pathology, had a serious personality disorder, and had abused drugs in the past. They concluded Payton had no viable mental state defense. Payton indicated that he had problems dealing with women and sex. He also related that his parents were divorced when he was five, and he didn’t know his biological father until he was about twenty-five; his mother remarried an
engineer who
adopted Payton; and his
Since trial, Payton adduced evidence that he suffered from PTSD; he had experienced an early feeling of neglect; for the first five years of his life that his biological father was there, his father was alcoholic and abusive, and molested and raped Pay-ton’s step-sister; he was sad as a child; his stepfather was stern and verbally abusive; he had a possible learning disability; and he began using drugs as a teenager. Payton produced new expert reports in 2006 from Julie Kriegler, a social historian; Pablo Stewart, a psychiatrist; and Ricardo Weinstein, a neuropsychologist. They explain Payton’s family history, and offer observations about traumatized children. The experts conclude that Payton suffered from extreme mental and emotional disturbance.
Nothing that Merwin was told at the time of trial would have alerted him to a family history of the sort that Payton now espouses. The new expert reports run counter both to what contemporaneous examinations by Dr. Klatte and Dr. Kaufmann revealed, and to earlier reports in Payton’s Idaho state prison records.
3
Counsel interviewed family members, sought records, and consulted experts who conducted thorough evaluations. In these circumstances we cannot see how Merwin performed deficiently.
See, e.g., Hendricks v. Calderon,
With respect to PTSD, the record indicates that Payton spent twenty-two days in Vietnam, saw no action, and was removed due to drug abuse. The California Supreme Court found, based on an evidentiary hearing held by a special master, that Payton’s account of a combat role was untrue, counsel was not deficient in failing to investigate PTSD, and that Payton had not shown prejudice as the jury would “undoubtedly have given [evidence of PTSD] little weight once it learned that the primary basis for the initial diagnosis — the vivid and compelling descriptions of defendant’s alleged combat experiences in Vietnam — was sheer invention.”
People v. Payton,
Even accepting Payton’s recent proffer at face value, and assuming deficiency, Payton has not shown prejudice.
See Strickland v. Washington,
The crimes here were vicious. Evidence showed that Payton had previously committed a similar crime in the past, using a knife on a girlfriend when he wanted sex. Even if his biological father were abusive in the first five years of Payton’s childhood and he felt sad and neglected, his experience is not comparable to those in other cases where courts have found a reasonable probability that the outcome would have been different.
See, e.g., Rhoades v. Henry,
B
Payton’s second “procedural” claim is that the district court should have reconsidered its prior ruling on his
Brady
claim.
Brady v. Maryland,
We do not believe that disclosure of information in the 2006 proffer makes it reasonably probable that the outcome would have been different.
See Kyles v. Whitley,
Ill
Payton pursues two uncertified issues: whether he was deprived of effective assistance of counsel on account of Merwin’s failure to investigate or present evidence of PTSD at the penalty phase (Claim IV(A)(5)); and whether his sentence must be overturned for cumulative error (Claim IV(E)). To obtain a COA, the petitioner must make a “substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right.” 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2). Resolving doubts in Payton’s favor,
see Valerio v. Crawford,
A
As we have explained, Payton’s claim founded on PTSD fails. Merwin investigated Payton’s service record, and experts examined Payton, but no red flags warranted further investigation. Having retained qualified experts, it was not objectively unreasonable for Merwin not to seek others.
See Babbitt v. Calderon,
B
While the combined effect of multiple errors may violate due process even when no single error amounts to a constitutional violation or requires reversal, habeas relief is warranted only where the
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The California Office of Administrative Law approved a revised protocol on July 30, 2010, with an effective date of August 29, 2010. Cal.Code Regs. tit. 15 §§ 3349 et seq. (2010).
. We express no opinion as to whether this should be by way of habeas relief or through an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
See Muhammad
v.
Close,
. State rehabilitation reports indicated that Payton felt his parents indulged him and gave him everything he wanted, which caused him to become accustomed to getting his own way, and to apply this same rule when he became an adult. A form filled out by Pay-ton's mother on April 24, 1976, also indicated that Payton had a happy home life but seemed to lose interest in school during his senior year in high school. That’s when his parents agreed he could join the army.
. This case is also distinguishable from
Tinholster v. Ayers,
. These include that the prosecution misled the trial court into allowing jailhouse informants to testify they saw Payton gambling or extracting money from other inmates, when Escalera declared in 2006 that he never saw Payton do these things; that the prosecution’s presentation of Escalera's testimony was improper under
Simmons v. South Carolina,
