Tеrry Galowski appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Galowski raises three claims: (1) that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to request a competency hearing; (2) that he was incompetent to plead guilty; and (3) that the district court improperly granted a continuance during an evidentiary hearing. We reject all three claims and affirm.
BACKGROUND
Galowski pleaded guilty in Wisconsin state court to first degree murder and two related charges. The underlying facts of his crimes are not central to the issues in this appeal. Suffice to say that he shot and killed his wife’s former paramour as the victim was walking with his nine-year old daughter. Shortly after his arrest on March 10, 1987, Galowski retained John Day, an experienced criminal defense attorney. Before pleading guilty on May 20, 1987, Galowski met with Day at least eight times and spent between 25 to 40 hours with Day and Day’s partner or an investigator. In addition, special prosecutor Jeffrey Gabrysiak met with Day and Galowski a number of times.
Galowski initially denied his guilt and raised an alibi. Eventually, he recanted the alibi and admitted to Day that he hаd committed the murder. Galowski’s demeanor varied during his frequent conversations with Day. During the early meetings, Galowski’s behavior appeared normal. He asked pertinent questions and seemed to understand what Day was saying. As the date of the plea hearing approached, Galowski became increasingly upset, confused, and tearful. Nonetheless, Day and Galowski carefully went over the terms of the plea agreement. Galowski told Day that he understood the agreement, but that his mind “had been goin (sic) 100 miles an hour ...” and that he did not “know what is going on or what’s been happening.” Day became concerned about Galowski’s competence to plead guilty because Galowski just seemed to want to get the matter over with and Day was troubled by the idea of anyone pleading guilty to first-degree murder. In addition, Day knew that Galowski was taking Ativan for mild anxiety, that he had been hospitalized for an overdose of medication, and that he had attempted suicide some time in the past.
As a result, Day retained Dr. A.A. Lorenz to conduct a competency and insanity evaluation. Lorenz had performеd hundreds of such evaluations at the request of prosecutors and defense attorneys. Day considered Lorenz a defense-minded psychiatrist. Lorenz evaluated Galowski in jail on May 13, 1987. Lorenz concluded that Galowski was well-oriented to time, place, and person, that he experienced normal anxiety, reacted appropriately to the subject matter of the conversation, and showed no signs of a dissociative disorder. Lorenz further concluded that Galowski understood the criminal proceedings against him and exhibited confidence in his attorney.
Lorenz did not submit a written report prior to the plea hearing because he was *1179 waiting for certain test results. However, he had completed the evaluаtion prior to the hearing and informed one of Day’s associates of his opinion that Galowski was competent to assist with his defense and was not insane. Lorenz’s written report ultimately said nothing about competency and stated that Lorenz could not place a diagnosis on Galowski “for he has so many abnormal traits, some of which are of psychotic proportion.” Nevertheless, Lorenz concluded that Galowski was not insane.
Galowski entered his guilty plea on May 20, 1987 after an extended colloquy with the trial judge. The trial court immediately imposed a life sentence. Day never mentioned his misgivings about Galowski’s competence, ostensibly because Lorenz had quieted them. The trial court continued the matter for sentencing on Galowski’s two lesser charges to July 2, 1987. Sometime prior to July 2, Galowski sent a letter directly to the court asking for a continuance and informing the court that he wanted to withdraw his guilty pleas because he had not understood the proceedings and he did not think that Day was still representing him. The court considered Galowski’s pro se request at the July 2 hearing. Day argued in favor of thе continuance, stressing that the state would suffer no prejudice. The trial court denied the continuance and Galowski’s request to withdraw his guilty pleas, stating that he would not allow Galowski to withdraw the pleas simply on the basis of his own testimony, and that he could raise the matter on appeal. The court then sentenced Galowski to a five year concurrent sentenсe and an additional five year consecutive sentence.
In 1988, Galowski began meeting with Dr. Richard Ameson, a staff psychiatrist for the Wisconsin Department of Corrections. Although Ameson had worked with inmates for over 21 years he had not conducted a competency evaluation for over 20 years. Ameson first met Galowski when Ameson was called to treat Galowski during a severe panic attack. Arneson treated Galowski on an emergency basis and then continued as his regular therapist for the next few years. Ameson diagnosed Galowski as suffering from a dissociative disorder that had developed in response to early childhood sexual abuse which culminated in Galowski’s testifying against one of his abusers when Galowski was 11 years old. In Arneson’s opinion, this dissociative disorder rendered Galowski incompetent in 1987 because he would have been unable to participate in his own defense, assist his attorney, or understand the proceedings against him. Ameson believed that all Galowski would have wanted was to get the matter over with.
In 1988, in the course of state court post-conviction proceedings, another psychiatrist, Dr. Robert Miller, examined Galowski and determined that should Galowski’s conviction be overturned, he would be incapable of understanding the appeal proceedings as a result of his anxiety and depression. In 1989, the state requested another competency evaluation. A psychologist, L.L. Larrabee, evaluated Galowski and found him incompetent as a result of his post-traumatic stress syndrome.
The district court conducted an evidentiary hearing on Galowski’s § 2254 claims. At the hearing Doctors Lorenz and Ameson testified at length about their findings. Dr. Lorenz testified that he had reviewed Dr. Meson’s reports, but that they did not alter his conclusion that Galowski had been competent in May 1987. Galowski, Day, and special proseсutor Gabrysiak also testified. The district court evaluated the testimony and documentary evidence and concluded that the contemporaneous evidence of Galowski’s competence outweighed the more recent evidence of his incompetence. The district court also found no merit to Galowski’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim. This appeal followed.
ANALYSIS
Federal courts are authorized to grant a writ of habeas corpus when a person is held in custody under a state court judgment in violation of the United States Constitution. 28 U.S.C. § 2254. We review the district court’s findings of fact for clear error.
Griffin v. Camp,
*1180 A. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
To succeed on his ineffective assistance оf counsel claim, Galowski must demonstrate that his counsel’s performance was deficient and that the deficient performance prejudiced Galowski.
Strickland v. Washington,
We examine the performance prong of the
Strickland
test through a “highly deferential lens, indulging a strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance.”
United States ex rel. Partee v. Lane,
Galowski’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel is a non-starter. He claims that Day provided ineffective assistance by failing to request a competency hearing. Day did have a duty to ensure that Galowski was capablе of making a rational choice “among rationally understood probabilities.”
Stewart v. Peters,
Once Day received Dr. Lorenz’s report we find it difficult to imagine why he would have requested a hearing. At oral argument, Galowski’s аppellate counsel stressed that under Wisconsin law, it is the court’s responsibility to judge a defendant’s competence, and that Day’s failure to request a hearing somehow usurped the judge’s authority. However, once a defense expert opines that the defendant is competent, why would defense counsel still request a hearing? 2 Here, the most that might have happened is that Dr. Lorenz would have testified and Day would have been forced to attack the findings as incorrect. Perhaps Day could have kept searching for a psychiatrist who might have disagreed with Lorenz. Neither route was necessary. Day had misgivings about Galowski’s competence so it was appropriate for him to retain an expert to evaluate Galowski. However, once Lorenz quieted the misgivings, it was no longer incumbent upon Day to raise the issue. Day’s failure to request a competency hearing was not ineffective.
B. Retrospective Competence
A defendant has a due process right not to be tried for, or plead guilty to, a criminal offense unless he is competent.
Medina v. California,
This case is complicated by the fact that Galowski’s alleged incompetence was not raised in the state court. We have already held that Day was not ineffective for failing to raise the issue. Hоwever, that does not answer the question of whether Galowski was, in fact, competent to plead guilty. Unfortunately, the only way to decide that issue is to delve into the mire of a retrospective competency hearing. While we have doubts about the efficacy of such proceedings, we have sanctioned them previously.
See Ray v. Bowen,
In
United States ex rel. Lewis v. Lane,
we laid out the analysis for district courts to determine whether a retrospective competency hearing is necessary.
If the district court had applied the Lewis analysis, we think that it would have found a retrospeсtive competency hearing unnecessary because Galowski failed to “positively, unequivocally and clearly generate a real, substantial and legitimate doubt as to his mental capacity to meaningfully participate and cooperate with counsel” at the time of trial. However, the district court skipped the Lewis analysis and went straight to the retrospective competency hearing. Therefore, we will assume for purposes of argument that Galowski made an adequate showing under Lewis and move on to a review of the retrospective competency hearing.
Galowski first argues that the district court incorrectly placed the burden of persuasion on him at the competency hearing.
3
We note that it is not entirely clear that Galowski’s burden argument is cognizable in a habeas action.
Compare United States ex rel. Bilyew v. Franzen,
While the incompetency of a defendant during trial never сan be harmless, improper procedures utilized at a competency hearing may be deemed harmless if “there is no reasonable possibility that proper procedures would have produced a finding of incompetency.”
Lewis,
*1182
On the side of competence is a contemporaneous psychiatric evaluation conducted by an experienced forensic psychiatrist. In addition, Galowski’s trial counsel, who was in the best position of any lay person to evaluate GalowsM’s competence, did not believе him incompetent.
Medina,
Weighing against that formidable lineup are evaluations that GalowsM was incompetent at various times — all well after GalowsM’s guilty plea. In particular, Dr. Arneson, who testified at length in the district court, found retrospectively that GalowsM was incompetent at the time he entered his guilty plea. However, we see a number of weaknesses in Dr. Arneson’s testimony as compared to that of Dr. Lorenz. First, Dr. Arneson’s evaluation was far from contemporaneous. Not surprisingly, we give more credence to contemporaneous psychological evaluations.
Ray v. Bowen,
GalowsM points to the fact that he was on medication fоr anxiety in May 1987 as contemporaneous proof of his incompetence. We are not moved by GalowsM’s use of Ativan for “mild anxiety,” because any person facing a life sentence will suffer from some anxiety.
Cf. Stewart v. Gramley,
C. Continuance of Competency Hearing
GalowsM’s final contention that the district court abused its discretion by continuing the competency hearing also fails. GalowsM bears a heavy burden in appealing this ruling because such decisions are left to the discretion of the district court.
United States v. Withers,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Day did not observe tiny significant external manifestations of Galowski’s purported psychological problems. Rather, Day's conсern about Galowski’s competence centered on his willingness to plead guilty to first degree murder. However, we agree with the district court’s observation that "it is not necessarily irrational for a person to choose not to go through a trial when he confessed and has no viable defense to the charges, even when the charges include first degree murder.”
. It is truе that the trial court cannot ignore clear signs of incompetence merely because the defense attorney fails to request a competency hearing.
See Chichakly v. United States,
. The Appellee counters that Galowski waived this issue by failing to raise it in the district court or pursue it in his opening brief.
United States v. Jones,
