Defendant Richard Dillon appeals from the district court’s denial of his petition for writ of habeas corpus. While we affirm that court’s refusal to hold an evidentiary hearing and its finding that the state trial judge’s imposition of the d'eath sentence complied with Indiana law, we disagree with the court’s conclusion that Dillon received effective assistance of counsel under the Sixth Amendment. 1 Accordingly the writ of habeas corpus must issue if there is no retrial.
I
Dillon was convicted on July 28, 1981, by the Knox County, Indiana, Superior Court of two counts of felony murder and one count each of burglary and conspiracy. These charges stemmed from the March 8, 1981, stabbing murder of William and Mary Hilborn during a burglary. The eighteen-year-old defendant was arrested four days later after making a lengthy written confession to Indiana state police officers, a confession that was admitted into evidence at his trial. He had no prior criminal record.
Lawyer Jimmy Fulcher represented Dillon at trial. Although Fulcher had some civil and criminal experience, that experience was limited. He had been admitted to the bar for only two and one-half years, and his only significant courtroom experience was a “major felony trial” (Tr. Vol. I at 13) that he had just completed. Fulcher’s representation of Dillon occurred during a time of personal crisis for him. In February 1981 his wife of eleven years filed for divorce, a divorce that became final against his wishes on April 15, 1981 (Tr. Vol. I at 12). On April 18, 1981, his brother had a motorcycle accident that left him paralyzed (id. at 6; Tr. Vol. Ill at 633). Trial was scheduled to begin on July 13, 1981. On July 5, Fulcher’s father, who had been quite ill for some time, underwent emergency heart surgery and was in the hospital in very serious condition (Tr. Vol. I at 6). This final event prompted Fulcher to file an affidavit on July 7, attesting to his own incompetence and requesting a continuance from the July 13 trial date so that he could prepare adequately. The trial judge denied his request, although after the jury was selected he did delay trial until July 20 to afford Fulcher an extra weekend in which to prepare.
Dillon’s trial concluded at the end of July. The trial judge, following the recommendation of the jury, sentenced Dillon to death on August 21, 1981. After exhausting all state remedies, Dillon filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in federal district court. He requested the court to hold an evidentiary hearing on allegedly new evidence relating to his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a request that the district court denied. Petitioner argued (1) that he had been deprived of assistance of counsel in violation of the Sixth Amendment, (2) that he was convicted in part on evidence obtained during an illegal detention in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights, (3) that the Indiana death penalty statute was unconstitutional, and (4) that the trial court did not find beyond a reasonable doubt that elements to support the imposition of the death sentence were present. The district court denied each of these contentions. Dillon appeals the denial of the evidentiary hearing and his claims relating to assistance of counsel and the trial court’s imposition of the death penalty-
II
The Sixth Amendment guarantees criminal defendants the “Assistance of Counsel,” which numerous Supreme Court cases have defined as the effective assistance of counsel. See,
e.g., United States v. Cronic,
— U.S.-,
do not establish mechanical rules. Although those principles should guide the process of decision, the ultimate focus of inquiry must be on the fundamental fairness of the proceeding whose result is being challenged. In every case the court should be concerned with whether, despite the strong presumption of reliability, the result of the particular proceeding is unreliable because of a breakdown in the adversarial process that our system counts on to produce just results.
Id.
The affidavit Fulcher filed alleging his own incompetence, a claim he reaffirmed in a second affidavit filed after the trial (Tr. Vol. I at 6-7), renders Dillon’s allegation of ineffective assistance highly unusual. That an inexperienced attorney was defending Dillon, a young defendant with no prior criminal record, on very serious charges augments the significance of this affidavit. These circumstances cause us to examine Dillon’s petition with care. Although Dillon was only eighteen years old and was facing trial on charges for which the State of Indiana had recommended the death penalty, the trial judge seemed more concerned with the disruption in his schedule caused by the defense’s successful change of venue motion and the inconvenience a continuance would cause than in seriously evaluating the allegations of trial incompetence placed before him (Tr. Vol. Ill 640-641). We recognize the trial court’s frustration with Fulcher’s request. We also recognize that the scheduling problems trial courts face mandate that they be granted “broad discretion * * * on matters of continuances; only an unreasoning and arbitrary ‘insistence upon expeditiousness in the face of a justifiable request for delay’ violates the right to the assistance of counsel.”
Morris v. Slappy,
We would not reach this conclusion if Fulcher’s actions were a subterfuge to gain advantage for his client. But his statements could not have served any trial strategy. The State suggests that Fulcher wanted to force the State into a plea-bargaining situation, because the State needed to try Dillon before it tried his alleged accomplice in order to have Dillon’s testimony at the latter’s trial. Nowhere does the State demonstrate that its case against the accomplice was so weak that it in fact would have been forced to plea bargain. In fact, much of the physical evidence introduced against Dillon was found in the accomplice’s possession or was otherwise connected primarily to him rather than to Dillon (Tr. Vol. VIII at 2005, 2007, 2021, 2032, 2036, 2038). No other evidence to support the State’s contention appears in the record, and we reject the argument as implausible. Even if the State would have been forced to plea bargain had the continuance been granted, the belief that an attorney in open court would state that he was incompetent and that he would “take whatever disciplinary action is coming to me for being incompetent, and for doing this to the court and to the State and to the witnesses” (Tr. Vol. Ill at 638) solely to benefit Dillon by plea bargaining stretches credulity too far.
The trial court was correct in asserting that “it’s the court’s duty to determine * * * whether an attorney is competent or not to represent a defendant” (id. at 640). The State argues that the number of days between the catastrophic events in Fulcher’s life and Dillon’s trial minimized the drain inevitably placed on him as he tried to prepare for Dillon’s trial. Specifically the State contends that because the divorce was final eighty-nine days before trial, and because Fulcher’s father did not die until forty-seven days after trial began (Govt.Br. at 4), those events did not impact on Fulcher’s trial preparation. Such reasoning is unduly narrow. Certainly the emotional reverberations the events must have had on Fulcher’s concentration and mental and legal acuity merited more than the cursory attention the trial court gave them. Perhaps a divorce eighty-nine days before trial alone would not have affected Fulcher sufficiently for the trial court to consider his claim with care. Perhaps another attorney might not have been so affected. What is crucial is the cumulative effect on Fulcher of the three events — his divorce April 15, 1981, his brother’s accident three days later and his father’s surgery on July 5, 1981. That the cumulative effect is significant is readily apparent from Fulcher’s request on July 7th — only when his father became critically ill, the proverbial last straw, did Fulcher realize how seriously this series of events had compromised his preparation. 4 *900 Add to the effect such events would have on any lawyer, regardless how experienced, the fact that Fulcher had been in practice only two and a half years, that this was his first murder case, and that evidently his only prior criminal experience was one “major felony case,” and the cavalier attitude of the trial court is even more troubling. 5
Errors by Fulcher that prejudiced Dillon’s trial support Dillon’s Sixth Amendment allegation. Contrary to the view of the district court, such errors do exist. The State of Indiana itself identified several such errors in its argument opposing Fulcher’s request for a continuance. The State, in illustrating the great amount of preparation it had undergone for this trial that it did not want to see suspended for several months in case the continuance was granted, stated that “there’s an immense amount of evidence in this case to go through” (Tr. Vol. Ill at 634). The State also indicated that Fulcher had been very dilatory about giving Dillon’s defenses to the State, that in fact the alibi defense he submitted was barred for not complying with statutory time requirements, and that Fulcher had failed to pursue avenues of investigation that he knew were available (Tr. Vol. Ill at 634-636). 6 Fulcher also conceded that he had spent less than four hours with Dillon from the time of arrest
to trial (Tr. Vol. I at 6). The State counters this admission with evidence showing that Fulcher visited Dillofi 10-15 times in the first jail in which he was imprisoned, and may have visited Dillon in the second jail in which he was confined (id. at 12). Even so, the frequency with which Fulcher visited Dillon in jail is not probative of the length of his visits there. Accepting Fulcher’s statements regarding the amount of time he had taken to prepare, it is questionable whether he could have done so adequately. The State’s own catalogue of Fulcher’s deficiencies supports this conclusion (Tr. Vol. Ill at 634-636). The State may have been right in asserting that granting a continuance would have been “grossly unfair” to the State by possibly forcing it to plea bargain with Dillon, but this argument is irrelevant in the instant situation. Fairness to Dillon, not to the State, is the crux.
Fulcher’s lack of preparation evidenced itself at Dillon’s trial. To begin, Dillon attempted at Fulcher’s recommendation to plead guilty to being an accomplice to the murder, a plea contrary to the facts already admitted into evidence and properly rejected by the trial judge. The prejudice of this defective plea is not measurable, but it surely affected the trial judge’s assessment of aggravating and mitigating circumstances.
7
The Supreme Court reiterat
*901
ed in
United States v. Cronic,
— U.S. at -,
Even more inexplicably, Fulcher never attempted to plea bargain with the State. Certainly failure to initiate plea-bargaining negotiations is not always error, but in a case in which the State would prefer the defendant’s testimony at an accomplice’s trial, defense counsel’s failure to explore the possibility is inexplicable. Whether or not the State would have regarded the attempt favorably is irrelevant. What is relevant is the strong suggestion of unfamiliarity with the case and lack of preparation that the failure to try to plea bargain shows.
Fulcher’s conduct at Dillon’s death penalty hearing confirms this suggestion of lack of preparation. The only evidence that Fulcher offered, in addition to that already introduced at trial, was an extremely limited direct examination of the defendant. Fulcher asked Dillon his age, whether he had ever before been in trouble with the law, whether he had intended to kill anyone, and nothing else (Tr. Vol. VIII at 2076-2077). Fulcher offered no character witnesses, either at the trial or at the subsequent death penalty hearing. Surely doing so would be standard practice for an
attorney defending an eighteen-year-old with no prior criminal record. Fulcher’s almost nonexistent effort to avoid the death penalty once Dillon’s guilt was established is incomprehensible and was extremely prejudicial to Dillon.
If Fulcher’s omissions and mistakes were “within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance,”
Strickland v. Washington,
— U.S. at-,
Ill
Dillon also appeals the district court’s denial of an evidentiary hearing on the issue of effective assistance of counsel. He alleges that the discovery of new evidence compels such a hearing. Specifically, he alleges that his trial counsel had a wager on the outcome of the trial, that he improperly conferred with counsel for the codefendant, and that he never attempted or initiated a plea agreement or informed Dillon of any such agreement. The State concedes that the district court had the authority to hold an evidentiary hearing (Govt. Br. at 18). The only question is *902 whether 28 U.S.C. § 2254 mandated such a hearing, or if not, whether the district court should have held a hearing anyway.
Although the State argues that these assertions constitute issues not raised below and as such are barred from consideration on habeas review, see
Williams v. Duckworth,
Contrary to what Dillon alleges,
Strickland v. Washington, supra,
did not establish new standards for evaluating Sixth Amendment ineffective assistance of counsel claims that would require a hearing.
Strickland,
— U.S. at-,
IV
Dillon’s final allegation concerns the trial court’s imposition of the death sentence. Indiana has a bifurcated system in which guilt is assessed at the first stage and the sentence is determined at the second, a process similar to that upheld by the Supreme Court in
Gregg v. Georgia,
The writ of habeas corpus is granted and defendant will be released unless the case is retried within the next 90 days.
Notes
. The Sixth Amendment provides in pertinent part: In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right * * * to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defense.
. Justice O’Connor identified three categories of cases in
Strickland,
— U.S. at-,
. The proper focus of course should be on the adversarial process rather than the defendant's assessment of his lawyer’s preparation.
United States v. Cronic,
— U.S. at-n. 21,
. The State also emphasized in its argument to the trial court that when the State had asked Fulcher in June at a pretrial conference whether he contemplated either withdrawing or ask *900 ing for a continuance, Fulcher had said "he didn’t know about a continuance,” but "he wasn't going to withdraw” (Tr. Vol. Ill at 633). Perhaps Fulcher should have realized earlier the impact his emotional problems were having on his trial preparation. But that factor does not illuminate whether he really was having those difficulties and to what extent they were affecting his competence. Fulcher’s comments indicate that only when his father had emergency surgery did he realize the extent to which the emotional stress he was under had disabled him from preparing adequately (id. at 637-638). Even the State had to concede that preparing for a murder trial "is a very strenuous thing to go through” (id. at 633).
. We were advised at oral argument that Dillon’s trial was' Fulcher’s first capital murder case. We also note that appellate counsel advised us at oral argument that their involvement with the case stemmed from their being appointed to assist Fulcher in appealing Dillon’s conviction and sentence. This appointment and Fulcher's subsequent withdrawal from the case provide further evidence of his unfamiliarity with this type of case and his ineffectiveness in providing Dillon competent counsel.
. In July 1984 Fulcher was disbarred for two years for neglect in prosecuting a case unrelated to the one before us, so that this dilatory pattern of conduct is not new to him. See
In the Matter of Fulcher,
. At the very least, the trial judge may have viewed the attempted accomplice plea as a calculated attempt to avoid punishment for the crime, and so as evidence that Dillon was in no way repentant. Such an assessment would affect his weighing of aggravating and mitigating circumstances. The only aggravating circumstance was that of the murder's being committed during a burglary, which the judge was to balance against the defendant's lack of any pri- or criminal history and ”[a]ny other circumstances appropriate for consideration.” Ind. *901 Code § 35-5-2-9 (1982). Given the defendant’s youth and lack of any criminal record, assessing the ultimate penalty against him seems overly harsh. The painful deaths of the two victims evidently influenced the trial judge against the defendant, for he refused to consider Dillon’s youth on the theory that the “capability of such cruelty in the mind of one that age cannot be considered a mitigating circumstance” (A. 22). This, of course, would particularly be true when the young defendant was unrepentant. We note that if the judge's logic were valid, then age would always work against young defendants convicted of the truly serious crimes for which the death penalty is permitted. The trial judge's statement reveals a misapprehension regarding the purpose of age in mitigating punishment. Judges and juries may consider age in mitigating the death penalty because young defendants have more of an opportunity to change their lives and to correct for one error than those who have more of a history of criminal conduct and are more hardened to the consequences for other people of their criminal acts. Consequently sentencing young adults irrevocably to death may be unfair, a consideration the trial judge refused to adopt.
. The alleged errors unmentioned in our opinion lack sufficient merit to warrant reversal.
. We agree with the district court that the dissenting justices were "pleading for clearer findings by the state’s trial judges, but * * * such is a matter of form more than substance" (Mem. Order of June 21, 1984), especially in light of the trial court's explicit statement, in our eyes, that he had found each factor beyond a reasonable doubt.
