Robert Glock appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for relief from a conviction and death sentence. A panel of this court granted relief from the sentence based on Glock’s claim that the trial court’s jury instructions were unconstitutionally vague, in violation of his Eighth Amendment rights as interpreted by
Espinosa v. Florida,
I. Background
Glock and his codefendant, Carl Puiatti, were convicted in Florida of the first-degree murder, kidnapping, and robbery of Sharilyn Ritchie. The Florida Supreme Court described the evidence against Glock as follows:
[0]n August 16, 1983, the woman victim arrived at a Bradenton shopping mall. As she exited her automobile, Puiatti and Glock confronted her, forced her back inside the car, and drove away with her. They took $50 from her purse and coerced her into cashing a $100 check at her bank. They then took the victim to an orange grove outside Dade City[,] where they took *881 the woman’s wedding ring and abandoned her at the roadside. After traveling a short distance, the appellants determined that the woman should be killed, and they returned in the car to her. When the car’s window came adjacent to the woman, Puiatti shot her twice. The appellants drove away, but when they saw she was still standing, they drove by the victim again and Gloek shot her. When the woman did not fall, the appellants made a third pass with the automobile, Glock shot her another time, and the woman collapsed.
Puiatti v. State,
Following their arrest, Puiatti and Glock made separate statements, each attributing to the other the decision to kill Ritchie and the final shot that felled her. A few days later, law enforcement officers interviewed Puiatti and Gloek together. In this joint interview, which was recorded by a court reporter, Puiatti began the interview, stating that the murder was Glock’s idea, but that Puiatti had agreed to it. Gloek then described the shootings. Glock and Puiatti agreed that Puiatti had fired the first three shots, and that Glock had fired the last shot. At the end, the two men agreed that the entire statement accurately recounted the incident.
Glock and Puiatti were tried together. At the penalty phase of their trial, all three confessions — Glock and Puiatti’s joint interview and their individual statements — were admitted in evidence. The trial court instructed the jury to disregard the individual statements to the extent each statement implicated the other defendant. However, no limiting instruction was requested or given with respect to the joint confession. The jury found Glock and Puiatti guilty of first-degree murder, kidnapping, and robbery with a firearm.
At the sentencing phase of the trial, the judge instructed the jury concerning five statutory aggravators that the jury could weigh against any mitigating circumstances. One of the aggravators was that the murder was “especially wicked, evil, atrocious, or cruel” (the “HAC factor”).
See
Fla.Stat.Ann. § 921.141(5)(h) (West Supp.1995).
1
The judge did not give the jury the Florida Supreme Court’s narrowing construction of this aggravator, which is that it refers to “the conscienceless or pitiless crime which is unnecessarily torturous to the victim.”
State v. Dixon,
In the trial judge’s subsequent reweighing of the aggravating and mitigating circumstances, the judge found as aggravating circumstances that the murder was committed for the purpose of avoiding lawful arrest, for pecuniary gain, and in a cold, calculated, and premeditated manner. The judge rejected the HAC factor, however. He reasoned that although the facts supported the HAC factor, the same facts also supported the “cold, calculated, and premeditated” aggravating factor, and that the latter was more appropriate. Weighing these aggravating circumstances against the statutory mitigating circumstance of Glock’s lack of criminal history and the nonstatutory mitigators of Glock’s *882 confession and amendability to rehabilitation, 3 the trial court sentenced Glock to death.
On appeal, the Florida Supreme Court affirmed.
Glock v. State,
A panel of this court affirmed the district court’s denial of relief on Glock’s claim that the admission of the joint confession violated his Confrontation Clause rights under
Cruz v. New York,
The State filed a suggestion for rehearing en banc, and this court voted the case en banc to reconsider the retroactivity analysis on both claims. We conclude that relief under Espinosa is barred by the nonretroactivity principle. Although we reject the panel’s reasoning as to the retroactive application of Cruz, we conclude that an extensive retroac-tivity analysis is unnecessary because Glock merits no relief under either Cruz or pre- Cruz law. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s denial of relief from the conviction and the denial of relief from the sentence based on Espinosa. The panel did not address Glock’s remaining challenges to his sentence because it granted relief on the Espinosa claim, id. at 1025, and we therefore remand the remaining claims challenging his sentence to the panel.
II. Issues and Standard of Review
The en banc court directed the parties to address two primary issues. The first is whether
Teague v. Lane,
We consider the retroactive applicability of a constitutional rule de novo.
Nutter v. White,
III. Discussion
A. The Espinosa Claim 4
Glock claims that despite his trial judge’s proper reweighing of aggravating
*883
and mitigating circumstances, the unrefined HAC jury instruction violated the Eighth Amendment’s command, as articulated in
Godfrey v. Georgia,
With two narrow exceptions, new rules of constitutional law do not apply retroactively to cases on collateral review. Penry
v. Lynaugh,
1. The Date of Finality
Glock’s conviction and sentence became final December 29, 1986. “A state conviction and sentence become final ... when the availability of direct appeal to the state courts has been exhausted and the time for filing a petition for a writ of certiorari has elapsed or a timely filed petition has been finally denied.”
Id.
The Florida Supreme Court denied Glock’s petition for rehearing October 28, 1986. At the time, Supreme Court rules required parties in criminal cases to file certiorari petitions within sixty days of the date of a denial of rehearing from the state court of last resort. Sup.Ct. R. 20.1, .4,
%. “The Legal Landscape”
Step two of Teague analysis requires -a federal court to “survey the legal landscape” as of the date of finality to determine if the rule that forms the basis of the petitioner’s claim is “new.” Id. Our survey leads us to conclude that Espinosa’s rule is new. Precedent in 1986 did not dictate the rule that in a procedure which divides sentencing responsibility between judge and jury, a trial judge’s constitutionally sound reweighing of aggravating and mitigating circumstances does not cure the jury’s consideration of an unconstitutionally vague aggravator.
No single formulation captures the meaning of “new.” When the case the petitioner relies upon does not explicitly overrule precedent (and
Espinosa
did not), the case “announces a new rule if the result was not
dictated
by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s conviction became final.”
Teague,
The Court has made clear that when the opinion announcing the assertedly new rule does not explicitly address retroactivity, the opinion’s language has only limited relevance to
Teague
analysis. “[T]he fact that a court says that its decision is within the ‘logical compass’ of an earlier decision, or indeed that it is ‘controlled’ by a prior decision, is not conclusive for purposes of deciding whether the current decision is a ‘new rule’ under
Teague.” Butler,
In this review, we keep several principles in mind. First, to “dictate” a result, prior precedent must be specific; it is not enough that it name the general principle from which the assertedly new rule sprang.
See Sawyer,
*885
If Supreme Court precedent does not by itself resolve the
Teague
issue, we can look to the opinions of the courts of appeals and state courts. Although the courts of appeals do not “dictate” a particular rule to state courts,
see Lockhart v. Fretwell,
— U.S. -, -,
Supreme Court Precedent
With these principles in mind, we turn to our survey of the caselaw at the end of 1986, when Glock’s conviction became final. At that time, the Supreme Court had decided only one case directly addressing the constitutionality of death sentences based on vague aggravating circumstances. In
Godfrey v. Georgia,
Godfrey’s ambiguity on the
Espinosa
issue is not resolved by viewing
Godfrey
through the lens of Supreme Court application of the Eighth Amendment to Florida’s trifurcated death sentencing procedure. In 1986, the Court had considered the jury’s role in this context only twice. In
Proffitt v. Florida,
The Supreme Court revisited Florida’s trifurcated procedure in
Spaziano v. Florida,
The Supreme Court’s consideration of other states’ trifurcated procedures likewise did not dictate Espinosa’s result. The most important of these other cases is
Baldwin v. Alabama,
The petitioner in
Baldwin
asserted that this Alabama statute was unconstitutional on its face because it prevented the jury’s individualization of his sentence, in violation of the principles of
Woodson v. North Carolina,
Thus, caselaw predating the finality of Glock’s conviction did not compel
Espinosa’s
result. Later cases do not call into question this conclusion. We consider Supreme Court cases issued after the date of finality, but only if we are confident that they did not change the law in favor of defendants.
See Taylor,
— U.S. at -,
Neither does
Clemons
show that caselaw extant in 1986 compelled
Espinosa’s
result. In
Clemons,
as in
Cartwright,
the jury was given insufficient guidance in interpreting the HAC factor. Unlike Oklahoma, however, Mississippi permits its supreme court to reweigh aggravating and mitigating circumstances. Although the Mississippi Supreme Court had failed to reweigh explicitly in
Clemons,
the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the practice of appellate reweighing to cure
Godfrey
error in jury proceedings comported with constitutional commands.
Clemons,
We thus conclude that relevant Supreme Court precedent — Godfrey, its progeny, and cases concerning trifurcated sentencing schemes — did not dictate Espinosa’s result in 1986.
Eleventh Circuit Precedent
Four Florida capital habeas cases from this circuit well illustrate that
Espinosa’s
outcome was “susceptible to debate among reasonable minds.”
Butler,
First, in
Proffitt v. Wainwright,
*888
Hargrave v. Wainwright,
Finally, a 1989 Eleventh Circuit case conflicts with the rule later adopted in
Espinosa.
8
The petitioner in
Bertolotti v. Dugger,
We know of no Eleventh Circuit case from this time whose holding viewed
Espinosa’s
result as required by Supreme Court precedent. However, dictum in one ease arguably did take this view. In
Adams v. Wainwright,
Thus, relevant Eleventh Circuit cases from the time may not all flatly contradict Espino-sa ’s holding, but neither do they, as a whole, show that Supreme Court precedent at the time dictated Espinosa’s result.
Florida Precedent
Florida cases also suggest that Espinosa’s result was not required by pre-1986 Supreme Court precedent.
Cf. Bohlen,
— U.S. at -,
[i]t is true that both the Florida and Oklahoma capital sentencing laws use the phrase “especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel.” However, there are substantial differences between Florida’s capital sentencing scheme and Oklahoma’s. In Oklahoma the jury is the sentencer, while in Florida the jury gives an advisory opinion to the trial judge, who then passes sentence. The trial judge must make findings that support the determination of all aggravating and mitigating circumstances. Thus, it is possible to discern upon what facts the sentencer relied in deciding that a certain killing was heinous, atrocious, or cruel.
Id. at 722. This case shows that Florida courts no more considered Espinosa’s result inevitable under Supreme Court precedent than did the Eleventh Circuit.
Glock relies upon two Florida cases to contend that
Teague
does not bar relief on his
Espinosa
claim. First, he contends that Florida’s retroactive application of
Espinosa
obviates the need for federal
Teague
analysis. In
James v. State,
Glock also relies upon
Riley v. Wainwright,
In sum, the legal landscape in 1986, and for several years thereafter, was uncertain as to whether the Florida trial judge’s reweighing of aggravating and mitigating circumstances could cure
Godfrey
error before the jury. Supreme Court caselaw suggested that a court could cure error at the jury stage, and Eleventh Circuit cases show that courts at the time read Supreme Court precedent that way. Florida eases likewise do not indicate that state courts believed that under Supreme Court precedent the trial judge’s reweighing could not cure
Godfrey
error.
Espinosa’s
rule is new, therefore, and unless an exception to the
Teague
rule applies,
Espinosa
is not retroactively applicable.
Penry,
3. Exceptions
Teague’s bar on the retroactive application of new rules has two exceptions. The first is
*890
for new rules “that place an entire category of primary conduct beyond the reach of the criminal law.”
Sawyer,
Glock contends that
Espinosa
error falls within the second exception because a vague instruction renders the jury’s decision inaccurate and unreliable. This argument echoes that of the petitioner in
Sawyer.
Sawyer asserted that the rule of
Caldwell v. Mississippi,
Espinosa’s rule does not meet these qualifications. The Court has offered
Gideon v. Wainwright,
I. Conclusion of the Teague Analysis
Because precedent existing at the time Glock’s case became final did not dictate the result of
Espinosa,
and no exception to the nonretroactivity rule applies, Glock is not entitled to the benefit of
Espinosa’s
rule.
Penny,
B. The Cruz Claim
Glock contends that the introduction of the interlocking confession of his nontestifying codefendant Puiatti violated Glock’s Sixth Amendment Confrontation Clause rights as explicated in
Cruz v. New York,
The law of the ease doctrine provides that
this
court’s prior holdings in a case generally bind the district court on remand and this court in any subsequent appellate proceedings in the same case.
See, e.g., Ellard v. Alabama Bd. of Pardons and Paroles,
It is, however, unnecessary for us to proceed further with the
Teague
analysis and determine whether
Cruz
announced a “new rule,” or instead whether the result in that case was dictated by prior precedent such as
Bruton v. United States,
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons given above, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of relief from the sentence based on the Espinosa claim. We also AFFIRM the denial of relief as to Gloek’s conviction. We REMAND to the panel for consideration of Gloek’s remaining claims challenging his sentence.
TJOFLAT, Chief Judge, dissenting, in which KRAVITCH and HATCHETT, Circuit Judges, join:
I.
During the penalty phase of the Florida capital sentencing scheme, the jury weighs the aggravating circumstances against the mitigating circumstances and recommends either a sentence of death or life imprisonment. See Fla.Stat.Ann. § 921.141(2). The statute does not require the jury to make any specific findings regarding the aggravating or mitigating circumstances it finds. Thus, the jury’s recommendation is akin to a general verdict in that it does not reveal the basis for the decision. Accordingly, if the jury recommends death, a reviewing court cannot tell from examining the verdict: (1) which aggravating circumstances the jury may have found from the evidence, unless the court submitted only one aggravating circumstance to the jury; (2) which mitigating circumstances the jury may have found; or (3) whether any error in the court’s instructions — regarding either aggravating or mitigating circumstances — influenced the jury’s death recommendation.
After the jury makes its recommendation, the trial judge weighs the aggravating and mitigating circumstances and imposes the sentence, providing written findings to support a death sentence.
1
See id.
§ 921.141(3). The statute characterizes the jury’s recommendation as an “advisory sentence.”
See id.
§ 921.141(2). Nevertheless, Florida case-law requires that the trial judge give “great weight” to the jury’s recommendation of life imprisonment,
Tedder v. State,
Assume that a jury returns a death recommendation after receiving an erroneous instruction on one or more aggravating or mitigating circumstances. If the trial judge does not recognize the error, he may ultimately sentence the defendant to death without dealing with the error. 3 Alternatively, if the trial judge recognizes the error and finds that it was not harmless, he can seek to eliminate the error either: (1) by explicitly disregarding the thumb from the death side of the scale and giving the jury’s recommendation no weight as if the defendant waived his right to a jury in the sentencing phase; or (2) by switching the thumb from the death side to the life side of the scale but then meeting the Tedder standard for overriding a life recommendation and imposing the death penalty.
I know of no Florida case in which a trial judge has sought to eliminate the error by either method. A judge who gives the jury’s recommendation no weight has essentially converted the jury sentencing process into a bench trial. This is contrary to state law because Florida gives the defendant the right to seek a life recommendation from the jury and, with that, the heightened protection of Tedder. Furthermore, an error in the instruction on an aggravating factor increases the likelihood that the thumb will be placed on the death side of the scale and decreases the possibility that the thumb will be placed on the life side; thus, simply removing the thumb from the death side does not fully compensate for the error because it still denies the defendant his right to seek a life recommendation. The Supreme Court of Florida might, however, affirm a death sentence if the trial judge switched the thumb to the life side of the scale and then satisfied the Tedder override standard because the defendant could have suffered no prejudice from the erroneous instruction — that is, the defendant constructively received the best possible outcome from the jury, a life recommendation.
When the Supreme Court of Florida reviews a case in which the jury received an invalid instruction on aggravating or mitigating circumstances, the court cannot determine what effect the error had on the jury’s recommendation because, as noted, the jury does not make any findings. The court has three alternatives for disposing of the case: (1) find the error harmless, i.e., that the jury would have recommended death regardless of the error; 4 (2) find the error not harmless and resentence the defendant independent of the tainted trial court sentence; 5 (3) find the *893 error not harmless and choose not to resen-tence the defendant, 6 but rather vacate the death sentence and remand the case either for a new sentencing proceeding or, if the record will not sustain the death sentence, the imposition of a life sentence. 7
The Supreme Court of Florida has remanded a case for a new sentencing proceeding on a number of occasions.
8
In
Elledge v. State,
*894 Would the result of the weighing process by both the jury and the judge have been different had the impermissible aggravating factor not been present? We cannot know. Since we cannot know and since a man’s life is at stake, we are compelled to return this case to the trial court for a new sentencing trial at which the factor of the [other] murder shall not be considered. See Miller v. State,332 So.2d 65 (Fla.1976); Messer v. State,330 So.2d 137 (Fla.1976). This result is dictated because, in order to satisfy the requirements of Furman v. Georgia,408 U.S. 238 ,92 S.Ct. 2726 ,33 L.Ed.2d 346 (1972), the sentencing authority’s discretion must be “guided and channeled by requiring examination of specific factors that argue in favor of or against imposition of the death penalty, thus eliminating the total arbitrariness and capriciousness in its imposition.”
Elledge,
We approved this procedure sub silentio, but found no error in the trial court’s refusal to empanel a new jury because “in deciding the earlier appeal, we held that there had been no error at the original sentencing trial with regard to evidence and instructions, so that the jury’s recommendation was valid and a new jury recommendation was not required. Therefore, the trial court’s decision on remand not to convene a jury was in keeping with our mandate and was proper.”
Lucas,
The Supreme Court of Florida has also recognized that, when both mitigating and aggravating circumstances are present, “we must guard against any unauthorized aggravating factor going into the equation which might tip the scales of the weighing process in favor of death.”
9
Elledge,
II.
When the Florida Supreme Court fails to recognize a constitutional error in the trial court’s instructions to the jury at the close of the sentencing phase of the trial and the Supreme Court, on certiorari, decides to review those instructions, three dispositions are possible. First, the Court could find the
*895
error harmless, assuming that the question of harmless error was before the Court, and affirm the judgment. Second, the Court could find the error not harmless and direct that the defendant’s death sentence be vacated. Third, the Court could remand the case to the supreme court for further proceedings in which that court could, among other things, find the error harmless. The Court chose this last disposition in
Espinosa v. Florida,
In
Espinosa,
the Supreme Court held that the trial judge’s charge to the jury at the close of the penalty phase of Espinosa’s trial failed to circumscribe the jury’s application of the “especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel” (HAC) aggravating circumstance as required by the Court’s precedent, namely
Godfrey v. Georgia,
This disposition allowed the supreme court to choose one of the three alternatives outlined above — affirm the sentence after harmless error analysis; resentence the defendant and render the error inoperative; or grant a new sentencing proceeding, or impose a life sentence, after finding the error not harmless. The court followed the first course,
see Espinosa v. State,
The majority argues that
Espinosa
created a “new rule” under
Teague v. Lane,
A careful reading of the Court’s opinion reveals that Espinosa constitutes nothing more than an application of well-settled principles. 11 The Court exercised traditional appellate review in considering whether the Supreme Court of Florida had erred in upholding the HAC instruction. In declaring the Florida HAC instruction unconstitutional, the Court simply applied the law as announced initially in Godfrey and later reaffirmed in Maynard. The Court’s conclusion — that the invalid instruction may have tainted the jury’s death penalty reeommen-dation and the trial judge’s sentence — merely acknowledged what the Supreme Court of Florida has been holding for years. 12 Finally, in remanding the case to the supreme court with the options set forth above, the Court was not announcing a new constitutional rule but was disposing of a case by a method that appellate courts everywhere have used for ages.
III.
In the case at issue, dock made two motions in limine for an expanded HAC instruction, which incorporated language from
State v. Dixon,
13
*897
Unlike the defendant in
Espinosa,
however, Glock did not challenge the HAC instruction on direct appeal to the Supreme Court of Florida.
15
See Puiatti v. State,
We are now presented with the same issue that the Supreme Court addressed in Espi-nosa — whether the HAC instruction was constitutional. The instruction was, of course, as the majority readily concedes, unconstitutional under the same precedent that the Court relied on to set aside Espinosa’s sentence. Furthermore, we cannot determine what impact the invalid instruction had on the jury’s recommendation and therefore on the trial judge’s sentence. If we were standing in the shoes of the Supreme Court on direct review, we would reject the Florida Supreme Court’s decision upholding the instruction and remand the ease for further proceedings — giving that court the same options the Supreme Court gave it in Espinosa. Because we are considering the HAC challenge in a collateral proceeding, however, we cannot remand the case to the Supreme Court of Florida. Rather, we can only direct the district court to issue a writ of habeas corpus setting aside Glock’s death sentence unless Florida grants him a new sentencing proceeding. 16
Although the trial judge’s HAC instruction cannot be squared with the holdings of God-frey and Maynard, which the trial judge was bound to follow, the majority would uphold Glock’s death sentence. As noted above, the majority believes that Espinosa’s conclusion that the HAC instruction may have tainted Glock’s sentence constitutes a “new rule” under Teague, which precludes us from applying such a rule in this case. 17 According to the majority, Glock’s sentence passes muster under the constitutional rules in effect when Glock’s sentence became final on December 29, 1986; 18 thus, the district court properly *898 rejected the HAC challenge in Glock’s habe-as petition.
Drawing on the finality-of-conviction analysis from
Teague
and
Caspari v. Bohlen,
— U.S. -, -,
Drawing on precedent in which the Supreme Court remanded a capital case to the state high court for resentencing or harmless error analysis 20 to eliminate the effect of any constitutional error in the jury function, the majority concludes that a Florida trial judge could have resentenced a defendant without regard to the jury’s recommendation. The majority uses dicta indicating that particular state courts failed to cure constitutional errors 21 as evidence that all state courts could cure such errors. The majority’s logical leap, however, ignores that this power is a question of state law rather than federal constitutional law. In short, simply because the Supreme Court allows a state high court the opportunity to resentence does not mean that the state court — trial or appellate — has the authority to do so.
Whether the state court can, on remand, save a death sentence by declaring the error harmless or by resentencing depends, of course, on what the state law authorizes the court to do. 22 Obviously, the court can un *899 dertake harmless-error analysis because the law of every state, as a matter of traditional appellate review, provides for harmless-error analysis. What remains unclear, however, is whether Florida law would have permitted its trial judges to resentence a defendant notwithstanding a tainted jury recommendation of death. If state law permits such resentencing, then implicitly the defendant’s right to an untainted jury recommendation or verdict does not extend to the high court level. 23
In upholding the trial judge’s resentencing, however, the majority ignores both the unique dictates of Florida law, which ensure the defendant the right to a jury recommendation in capital cases, and what actually occurred when the trial judge sentenced Glock to death. Although the trial judge did not explicitly rely on the HAC factor in his sentencing order, 24 the majority does not consider that the trial judge nonetheless permitted the thumb to remain on the death side of the scale during his decisionmaking process. The judge did not remove the thumb because: (1) he saw no need to remove it, i.e., he perceived no taint in the jury’s recommendation; 25 and/or (2) he was compelled by Florida law to give the jury’s recommendation “great weight.”
The majority misinterprets Florida law in concluding that a trial judge can resentenee the defendant regardless of the jury’s recommendation and thereby nullify the effect of any constitutional error in the jury instructions. Florida law gives the defendant the right, indeed a due process right,
26
to seek a life recommendation from the jury, to which the trial judge must give “great weight.”
See Tedder,
In conclusion, the majority seeks to avoid the consequences of an Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment violation during the jury trial phase of Glock’s sentencing proceeding by holding that the trial judge resentenced Glock without being influenced by the error. The majority does so by depriving Glock of his due process right under the Florida Constitution to pursue a jury recommendation of life imprisonment. Were the Florida Supreme Court, in reviewing Glock’s sentence, to follow this course — trading one constitutional right for another — we would, I submit, be quick to condemn such action.
I respectfully dissent.
Notes
. The statute itself reads "especially heinous, atrocious, or cruel.” The other aggravators were that the murder was committed (1) while the defendant was engaged in the commission, the attempted commission, of the crime of kidnapping; (2) for the purpose of avoiding a lawful arrest; (3) for pecuniary gain; (4) and in a "cold, calculated, and premeditated manner without any pretense of moral or legal justification.” Fla.Stat.Ann. § 921.141(5)(d), (e), (f), (i) (West Supp.1995).
. Florida has a trifurcated death-sentencing procedure. First, the jury weighs aggravating and mitigating circumstances and by majority vote recommends a sentence of life or death. Fla. Stat.Ann. § 921.141(2) (West 1985). Second, the trial court reweighs aggravators and mitigators and sentences the defendant, making written findings as to aggravating and mitigating circumstances if the court imposes the death penalty.
Id.
§ 921.141(3). Although by statute the trial court's sentencing is independent, the Florida Supreme Court has construed the statute to require the court to accord the jury’s recommendation great weight.
Tedder v. State,
. The trial court did not deem Glock's confession and rehabilitability to be mitigating circumstances, but stated that they weighed in the balance.
. The State contends that we may not address this claim because Glock has procedurally defaulted by not raising it on direct appeal. We disagree. When a state denial of relief fairly appears to rest on federal grounds, and the state court does not expressly rely on an independent and adequate state ground (such as a procedural default) for the denial, we may consider the merits of the claim.
Coleman v. Thompson,
501 U.S.
722,
735,
. In
Clemons v. Mississippi,
. Glock contends that Florida law has dictated Espinosa's result since
Tedder v. State,
. The
Hargrave
opinion was vacated pending hearing en banc.
Hargrave v. Wainwright,
. Although Bertolotti postdates the day Glock’s conviction became final, it was decided in essentially the same state of law as the pre-1986 cases. See the discussion of Supreme Court precedent, above.
. Nothing in James suggests that the Florida Supreme Court borrowed or applied the Teague doctrine, which does not apply to state courts. It is also far from clear that Glock would get relief under James's retroactivity rule, because unlike James, Glock did not raise the vagueness of the jury instruction as an issue on direct appeal.
. In
Barclay
v.
Florida,
Analytically the trial judge must make three separate determinations in order to impose the death sentence: (1) that at least one statutory aggravating circumstance has been proved beyond a reasonable doubt; (2) that the existing statutory aggravating circumstances are not outweighed by statutory mitigating circumstances; and (3) that death is the appropriate penalty for the individual defendant.
Id.,
. The Supreme Court has recognized this "thumb on the scale” analogy in
Stringer v. Black,
. As will become apparent from our discussion in Part III infra, this is precisely what occurred in Glock’s case.
. The Supreme Court of Florida has found harmless error when testimony regarding nonstatutory aggravating circumstances was presented to the jury,
Walton v. State,
.The Supreme Court of Florida has, at times, disputed that it acts as a resentencer.
Hudson v. State,
Although appellate resentencing deprives the defendant of a possible life recommendation from the jury, Florida law implicitly allows the high court to do so. Nothing in Florida jurisprudence, however, permits the trial court to disregard the jury’s recommendation — thereby depriving the defendant of a possible life recommendation — -and "resentence” the defendant as if he/ she had waived a jury trial for the sentencing phase.
.For example, in
Clemons v. State,
. For example, in
Parker v. State,
. The supreme court has required resentencing before a new jury when psychiatric testimony offered by the defense was improperly excluded,
Simmons v. State,
. The Supreme Court of Florida has affirmed death sentences despite the
trial judge’s
erroneous consideration of certain aggravating circumstances but only when no mitigating circumstances were found.
See Francois v. State,
. This statement from
Espinosa
must be interpreted in light of the Court’s holdings that (1) the HAC instruction was unconstitutional based on
Godfrey
and
Maynard
and (2) the jury's weighing of an invalid aggravating circumstance may have violated the Eighth Amendment. If, by this statement, the Court meant to preclude harmless-error analysis at either the trial or appellate level in state court, as the majority implies in the passage quoted above, then the Court must have prescribed a prophylactic rule of prospective application: Notwithstanding that the error may be harmless, or that the court may have rendered the error inoperative by resentencing the defendant, the sentence must be set aside. That the Court intended to fashion a prophylactic rule is unlikely given
Espinosa 's
citation to
Clemons v. Mississippi,
. A good indication that
Espinosa
did not create a new rule, but merely applied well-settled principles in the context of traditional appellate review, is that the Court announced its decision in a per curiam opinion, without granting certiorari and without holding oral argument. 505 U.S. at -,
. This court recognized the potential taint produced by an invalid jury instruction several years earlier in
Mann v. Dugger,
. The Supreme Court’s rejection of a facial challenge to the HAC aggravating circumstance in
Proffitt v. Florida,
. In Espinosa, the trial judge relied on the HAC aggravating circumstance in fashioning the defendant’s sentence. In Glock’s case, however, the trial court did not explicitly rely on the HAC aggravating circumstance because the facts that would support a finding of the HAC circumstance were the same as those that would support a finding of the "cold, calculated, and premeditated” (CCP) aggravating factor, which the trial court believed was more appropriate. Whether the court relied on the HAC aggravating circumstance is irrelevant; what is important is that the jury received, and may have relied on, the unconstitutional HAC instruction in recommending the death penalty. Thus, in Glock’s case, as in Espinosa, the erroneous HAC instruction may have tainted the jury’s recommendation and ultimately Glock’s sentence.
*897 The trial judge weighed the statutory mitigating circumstance of Glock's lack of a significant criminal history as well as nonstatutory mitigating circumstances including his cooperation with the police investigation and his capacity for rehabilitation, but found that the mitigating evidence did not outweigh the aggravating circumstances.
. If Glock had filed a petition for, and been granted, certiorari, his case would have presented itself in the same procedural posture as Espi-nosa.
. In theory, we have four options: (1) review the record to determine whether the invalid HAC instruction constitutes harmless error; (2) assume that the erroneous instruction poisoned the death sentence and issue the writ, as the panel did in this case; (3) certify a question to the Supreme Court of Florida, as the Supreme Court did in
Zant v. Stephens,
. The majority acknowledges, however, that if Espinosa applied, Glock’s death sentence would have to be set aside.
. In
Caspari v.
Bohlen, - U.S. -, -,
. The majority focuses on the trial judge because it treats the post-conviction Rule 3.850 proceedings as if they never occurred. Nevertheless, by considering an argument on collateral attack that should have been raised on direct appeal, the Supreme Court of Florida’s review of the merits of Glock's HAC instruction claim effectively reopened his direct appeal. The supreme court has previously permitted the use of collateral attacks to entertain, and grant relief on, issues that should have been raised on direct appeal.
See, e.g., Thompson
v.
Dugger,
. In
Clemons,
the Court stated that "the Federal Constitution does not prevent a state
appellate court
from upholding a death sentence that is based in part on an invalid or improperly defined aggravating circumstance either by reweighing of the aggravating and mitigating evidence or by harmless-error review;" the Court then remanded the case because there was no indication whether the Mississippi Supreme Court had correctly used either method.
. In
Godfrey,
the Court noted that "[t]he stan-dardless and unchanneled imposition of death sentences in the uncontrolled discretion of a basically uninstructed jury in this case was in no way cured by the affirmance of those sentences by the Georgia Supreme Court.”
. For example, on remand in Clemons, the Mississippi Supreme Court stated:
There is no authority for this Court to reweigh remaining aggravating circumstances when it finds one or more to be invalid or improperly defined, nor is there authority for this Court to find evidence to support a proper definition of an aggravating circumstance in order to uphold a death sentence by reweighing. Finding aggravating and mitigating circumstances, weighing them, and ultimately imposing a death sentence are, by statute, left to a properly instructed juiy.
. In
Spaziano v. Florida,
. See supra note 14.
. The record supports this assertion because the trial judge never recognized that the HAC instruction was unconstitutional. He rejected the more elaborate instruction proposed in Glock’s motions in limine. In addition, his sentencing findings do not mention any error, harmless or otherwise, in the instruction.
. Under Florida law, the right to a jury in the sentencing phase of a capital case is a due process right.
Cf. Cotton v. State,
. This deprivation of the right to a jury recommendation would not create an Eighth or Fourteenth Amendment issue.
See Harris v. Alabama,
- U.S. -,
Following the return of the jury's nonbinding advisory recommendation, the court shall make an independent weighing of the aggravating and mitigating circumstances and determine the appropriate sentence. The jury's nonbinding advisory recommendation shall be used solely for the purpose of apprising the trial judge and appellate court of the jury’s reaction to the evidence of aggravation and mitigation as a matter of information.
Governor Lawton Chiles vetoed H.B. 1319 on June 14, 1995. Had these amendments been enacted into law, the Florida jury's recommendation would no longer place a thumb on one side of the trial judge's sentencing scale. Rather, the jury in Florida would have the same nonbinding advisory role as that of an Alabama jury.
See
Ala.Code §§ 13A-5-46(e), 13A-5-47(e);
see also Harris,
- U.S. at-,
