William Thaddeus Turner appeals the district court’s denial of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition challenging his death sentence. Turner argues that his attorneys rendered ineffective assistance of counsel by failing to introduce certain mitigating evidence during the penalty phase of his trial and that his death sentence violates his constitutional right to a jury trial as established in
Ring v. Arizona,
I. BACKGROUND
A. Turner Murders his Wife and Joyce Brown
The facts concerning the two murders largely are undisputed. In 1969, Turner married Shirley Hart, a victim in this case, and for more than ten years, they had a loving, harmonious marriage. By 1983, however, their marriage had deteriorated. In February 1984, Shirley decided to leave Turner and take their two young daughters, seven-year old Anetra and five-year old Anita, with her. Shirley and the daughters moved in with Joyce Brown, the other victim in this case, and Joyce’s fifteen-year old daughter, Irene Hall. 1
Turner responded to the separation by spying on Shirley with binoculars, watching Joyce’s house, and peeping into the windows of Joyce’s apartment. Turner repeatedly arrived at Joyce’s apartment asking to speak to his estranged wife, but Shirley refused to see or talk to him. Joyce informed Turner on several occasions that Shirley did not want to talk to him. 2
*1250 During visits to Joyce’s house, Turner threatened to Ml both Shirley and Joyce and blamed Joyce for the disintegration of his family. Turner believed that his wife and Joyce were lesbians and prostitutes, who sold drugs and participated in illicit behavior in the presence of his daughters, especially seven-year old Anetra.
At approximately 6:30 a.m. on July 3, 1984, Turner walked to Joyce’s apartment. Turner was armed with a large knife and his father’s single-shot shotgun, which he obtained without his father’s permission. While kneeling on the sidewalk in front of the apartment building, Turner fired the shotgun two or three times into the building, shooting directly into the front door and windows and reloading after each shot.
At trial, Irene testified that she heard the shots and that Shirley ran into Irene’s bedroom and “ask[ed] her how to lock the door.” Anetra also was present in Irene’s bedroom. Shirley was unable to lock the door, and Turner entered the bedroom carrying the shotgun and the knife. While Irene hid under the bed, Turner pushed Shirley onto the floor, where he stabbed her approximately twenty-two times in the presence of fifteen-year old Irene and seven-year old Anetra. According to the two girls, Turner repeatedly cursed at Shirley as he continually stabbed her, saying: “bitch, I hate you;” “I’m sick and tired of you;” “you won’t let me see my kids;” and “[ylou’re the bitch I want.”
Anetra attempted to save her mother by beating on her father’s back and telling him to stop. Anetra ran out of the room when she heard Joyce call for her. Turner did not say anything to Anetra or Irene and did not react to anything the children said or did. Irene remained under the bed while Turner continued to stab Shirley to death.
After stabbing Shirley, Turner left the apartment building and went to the telephone booth where Joyce was on the phone with the police. 3 As approximately forty people watched, Turner stabbed Joyce repeatedly. Turner pulled Joyce out of the telephone booth by her hair and continued to stab her as she lay on the ground. Joyce’s daughter, Irene, approached a neighbor, handed him a shotgun, and begged the neighbor to shoot Turner. The shotgun, however, was empty; so the neighbor threw rocks at Turner in an attempt to stop the stabbing. Joyce begged Turner not to Ml her, but Turner replied, “no, you’re the one who kept my family away from me.”
The record is in dispute regarding whether Turner ceased stabbing Joyce when a police car passed by the telephone booth. Two witnesses testified that Turner continuously stabbed Joyce despite the fact that a police officer drove by and failed to stop to assist. In contrast, another witness testified that Turner stabbed Joyce a number of times until a police car drove by, and Turner “stood up in a correct position and pretended that there wasn’t anything going on.” According to this witness, after the police car drove by, Turner started to stab Joyce again. In addition, daughter Irene testified that Turner stabbed her mother, retreated behind a house until the police car passed by the scene, and then returned to the telephone booth to continue the stabbing.
Officers John Venosh, Carlton Aikens, and E.L. MacDonald of the Jacksonville Sheriffs Office arrived at the scene shortly after the murders. Turner fled down an alley, and the police officers chased him. According to Officer Venosh, Turner stopped, raised his hands while keeping a Mife in his right hand, and then took a *1251 step toward the officer. After a momentary standoff, Turner dropped the knife and surrendered to the officers. Officer Venosh testified that Turner immediately stated, “please don’t kill me, please don’t kill me.” As Turner and the officers walked to the patrol car, Turner remarked, “She was f — king up my family, she was f — king up my life.” Officer MacDonald described Turner as quiet and not hysterical, noting that Turner “appeared to be in control of himself.”
Turner was charged with two counts of first-degree murder for the deaths of Shirley Turner and Joyce Brown.
B. State’s Evidence in Guilt Phase
Turner’s murder trial began more than a year later on August 13, 1985. 4 Although what happened during the murders is largely undisputed, we recount in detail certain testimony that relates to the issues on appeal. During the guilt phase, the State first called James Edward Andrews, Joyce’s neighbor and an eyewitness to her murder. Andrews testified that on the morning of July 3, he “heard two shots[,] ... ran on the front porch,” and saw Turner fire a third shot from in front of Joyce’s apartment building, handling the shotgun “like a professional.” Andrews then returned to the inside of his house to call the police and upon returning outside saw Joyce “running to the telephone booth.” Andrews testified that Turner “opened the telephone booth door and ... stabbed her several times,” and then he “pulled her out of the telephone booth on the left-hand side and he got down on her and stabbed her several more times.” According to Andrews, Turner stabbed Joyce “[b]etween 40 and 45” times. At one point, Turner stopped the stabbing, and, as a police car drove by, Turner “stood up in a correct position and pretended there wasn’t anything going on.” Andrews also testified that Turner did not respond in any way when seven other bystanders yelled and threw bricks and other debris at Turner.
Regarding Turner’s behavior prior to the murders, Andrews testified that he had seen Turner approximately “eight times” spying on the apartment building where Turner’s wife and Joyce resided, including “a few times with binoculars.” Andrews heard Turner threaten to kill Shirley, Joyce, and another neighbor, Daniel Robinson.
The State then called Daniel Robinson who testified that he heard the shotgun blasts and ran out the back door of his apartment building. When Robinson got to the front of the building, “Mr. Turner was coming out [of] the house with blood all over him and he had a knife in his hand.” Robinson testified that Turner then ran “down to the telephone booth and grabbed Joyce and was cutting on Joyce.” According to Robinson, Joyce’s daughter, Irene, came to him “vñth a shotgun and she handed the shotgun to [him] and she kept hollering ... stop Mr. Turner, don’t let Mr. Turner kill my mother, please stop him.” The shotgun, however, was empty, so Robinson threw rocks at Turner but “he just kept on stabbing her.” Robinson also testified that Turner did not stop stabbing Joyce when the police drove by and that “he could tell [Turner] was mad because he was slobbering all out of the mouth” while he stabbed Joyce. Robinson stated that approximately forty people witnessed Turner stabbing Joyce.
Robinson testified that prior to the date of the murders, Turner was in the neighborhood “everyday ... [p]eeping and ... harassing” Shirley and Joyce. On a prior *1252 occasion, Turner threatened to kill him, Joyce, and Shirley. Robinson further testified that Turner’s spying, including watching the apartment with binoculars, had been occurring for four or five months and that Turner moved into a boarding house one block away from Joyce’s apartment.
The State then called two officers from the Sheriffs Office in Jacksonville. Officer MacDonald responded to the call for help near Joyce’s apartment complex and testified about Turner’s demeanor and condition upon arrest. According to MacDonald, Turner’s “hands were cut” and “soaked in blood,” and “[h]e appeared to be in control of himself. He wasn’t hysterical ... just quiet.” Officer L.M. Burton, an evidence technician, testified extensively about the physical evidence, photographs, and diagrams that he gathered at the crime scene. The evidence included Turner’s knife and shotgun; photographs of the victims, the phone booth, and the damage inflicted by the shotgun blasts to the front door and windows of the apartment; and diagrams of the apartment where Shirley and Joyce lived and the surrounding neighborhood.
The State then elicited expert testimony from Dr. Bonofacio Floro, a forensic pathologist and Deputy Medical Examiner for the City of Jacksonville. Dr. Floro performed autopsies on both Shirley and Joyce. Using photographs, Dr. Floro described the wounds of both victims. Dr. Floro testified that these wounds were “caused by a sharp instrument” and that the knife in evidence was consistent with the type of injuries suffered by Joyce.
Dr. Floro explained that there were seventeen stab wounds on the left side of Joyce’s chest, including five that “went through the chest wall thickness going into the heart or left lung.” The four stab wounds on the right side of Joyce’s chest included a “large stab wound ... with the lungs sticking out from the wound itself.” He testified that “three of the[] four [wounds on the right side] would have been fatal” and “five of the[] 17 [wounds on the left side] would have been fatal.” According to Dr. Floro, certain stab wounds on Joyce’s abdomen, ribs, and back would have been fatal. Dr. Floro concluded that Joyce had fifty-one total stab wounds and that she “died as a result of multiple stab wounds of the body, chest and abdomen.”
Dr. Floro further testified that Shirley suffered four stab wounds to the neck, one of which “severed the right carotid artery” and “would have been fatal.” There were twelve stab wounds on Shirley’s chest. He concluded that Shirley “died of multiple stab wounds of the neck and chest.”
The State then called Cynthia Dawson, one of Joyce’s daughters. Cynthia testified that she did not live with Joyce, but that her younger sister, Irene Hall, lived with Joyce, Shirley, Anetra, and Joyce’s fianeeé. Several times when Cynthia visited her mother, Turner appeared outside Joyce’s apartment asking to speak with Shirley, but Shirley never went outside. Joyce would tell Turner to leave, and Cynthia testified that Turner came over ten or eleven times in the months leading up to the murders and that he made threatening remarks to Joyce about her relationship with Shirley. Turner called them “lesbians” on two occasions, “bitches” on another, and said that they were not “going to live to tell anybody about how Shirley had left him.” On at least one instance, Cynthia saw him watching the house.
Irene Hall, Joyce’s fifteen-year old daughter, then testified. Irene and Ane-tra shared a bedroom, and Shirley had a bedroom all to herself. Irene testified regarding the murders and how she tried to save her mother, as follows:
*1253 I was in the room laying down and I heard a gunshot.... Shirley she came running back there, she was asking me how to lock the door and I told her to push the knob down_ [S]he was trying to push the knob down and the next thing I know, I saw William Turner come in the room and he pushed her down on the floor and I jumped under the bed.... [W]hen I jumped under the bed I had stayed [sic] under the bed and the only thing I heard was him when he was cussing Shirley, he was saying ... bitch, I hate you, and he was telling her, I am tired of you, I’m sick and tired of you and you won’t let me see my kids and I was laying up there under the bed while he was killing— stabbing Shirley....
Anetra ... she was sitting over by the bed first. Then she jumped up and she was jumping up, telling Mr. Turner to stop it, stop it, leave her mama alone and he wouldn’t leave her mother along [sic], so she ran outside ... I waited for awhile and I came from under the bed and when I came from under the bed, I didn’t see him in there, so I cut on another light and when I cut on the light I saw Shirley laying on the floor dead and I screamed and when I screamed, I thought about my mother so I ran, and I ran outside and I went on the porch and next thing I know, I saw him pulling my mother out the phone booth by her hair.... [W]hen I saw him pull my mother, I ran back in the house and I got the gun and then I ran back outside and then I had a gun, I was fixing to run over there to try to shoot him, but I couldn’t pull the trigger.
According to Irene, Turner stopped stabbing Joyce, ran “back behind the third house” when the police drove by, and, after the police were gone, Turner resumed stabbing Joyce. Irene also testified that Turner did not respond to either his daughter Anetra’s screaming at him or hitting him while he was stabbing Shirley or bystander Robinson’s throwing rocks and bricks at Turner while he was stabbing Joyce. Irene saw Turner around the outside of the apartment on prior occasions, but never with binoculars.
The State then called Anetra Turner to testify. Anetra lived with Shirley at Joyce’s apartment and shared a bedroom with Irene. On the morning of the murders, her father showed up at 6:00 a.m. and began shooting through the door. According to Anetra, her mother ran back into the bedroom, and Turner came into the room and “started stabbing her.” Anetra “got off the floor and started beating him on the back” but he kept stabbing Shirley, stating “[y]ou’re the bitch I want.” Anetra testified that despite her hitting and yelling at her father, he did not respond at all.
Anetra also ran outside to the telephone booth where Joyce was calling the police. Anetra testified that she and Joyce saw Turner coming toward the phone booth and that Joyce said, “Please don’t kill me.” Turner responded, “No, you’re the one who kept my family away from me.” At that point Anetra ran away down the street. When she returned, Turner was “getting into the police car.”
The State then called Officer John Ven-osh, who was involved in Turner’s arrest. Upon arriving at the crime scene, Venosh saw Turner flee and began chasing him. Turner ran behind some of the houses, and Venosh was yelling at Turner to stop running. Turner did stop running, turned around, and “stood completely up with his left hand over his head and his left hand was closed and in his right hand he had a knife.” At this point, Venosh told Turner to drop the knife or he would kill him. Venosh testified that Turner took a “step and a half’ toward him and then dropped the knife. Turner then stated, “please *1254 don’t kill me, please don’t kill me.” Ven-osh handcuffed Turner with the assistance of Reserve Officer Carlton Aikens and escorted him to the patrol car. Venosh testified that en route, Turner said, “She was f — king up my family, she was f — king up my life.”
Officer Sanford Leigh then testified to authenticate a 911 telephone call made by Joyce from the telephone booth on the morning of the murders. Officer Leigh was responsible for fielding incoming distress calls to the Sheriffs Office in Jacksonville. The trial court admitted the 911 tape and played it for the jury. The tape recorded Turner’s accusations at Joyce as he stabbed her, as follows:
Joyce: William please don’t hurt me! [Screams.]
Turner: You’re the one I want. You’re the one.
Joyce: [Screams.]
Turner: You’re the one.
Joyce: [Screams.]
Turner: You’re the one.
Joyce: [Screams.] I didn’t do nothin’, William. I didn’t do nothin’. I didn’t do nothin’. [Screams.] I didn’t do nothin’, William.
Turner: Yes you did.
Joyce: I didn’t do nothin’.
Turner: Yes you did.
Joyce: I didn’t do nothin’.
Turner: Yes you did.
Joyce: I didn’t do nothin’.
Turner: Yes you did.
Joyce: I didn’t do nothin’.
Turner: Yes you did.
Joyce: I swear.
Turner: Yes you did.
Joyce: I swear William. William, I swear I didn’t do nothin’.
Turner: Yes you did.
Joyce: [Unintelligible]
Turner: No you didn’t.
Joyce: [Screams.]
Turner: Yes you did. 5
After this evidence, the State rested. Turner’s counsel, Mr. Coxe, then moved for a judgment of acquittal on Turner’s behalf “as to each of the two counts in the indictment on the basis that the evidence received in the light most favorable to the state cannot support a verdict as charged on either count in the indictment” and that the “highest offense proven at most would be murder in the second degree.” The trial court denied the defense’s motion for acquittal.
C. Defendant’s Evidence in Guilt Phase
Turner first called Officer Carlton Ai-kens. On the morning of the murders, Aikens was in the patrol car with Officer MacDonald. When Aikens arrived on the scene, he saw Joyce “laying down on the ground, badly bleeding, bones from her body penetrating her skin.” Aikens ran behind Officer Venosh in pursuit of Turner. He testified that Officer Venosh told Turner to drop the knife, but that Turner responded “go ahead and kill me, go ahead and kill me, it’s not worth living for,” 6 although he also testified that Turner’s demeanor was “normal.” According to Ai-kens, Turner dropped his knife and complied with Officer Venosh’s commands to get on the ground. Aikens then handcuffed Turner.
*1255 The defense then called William White, the Chief Assistant Public Defender in the Florida judicial circuit that includes Jacksonville. White testified that Officer Ven-osh told him about his encounter with Turner the day of the murders. White said that Officer Venosh had described Turner as “in a very agitated state” and as “growling and gnashing his teeth.”
The defense’s next witnesses were Stephen Rayfield and Ernest Killian, both Special Agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Each testified that they met with Turner as a possible source of information regarding alleged criminal activity by Shirley and Joyce. Rayfield testified that they decided not to use Turner as an informant because (1) he did not have enough useful information and (2) “he seemed to be totally preoccupied with ... the relationship with his wife, his entire domestic relationship ... he was just too totally preoccupied.” Rayfield also said that Turner “maintained an even disposition throughout the interview, although [Turner] was high-strung.” Killian also testified that Turner “seemed to have an emotional preoccupation with his family situation ... during the time of the interview, he consistently was speaking about his poor domestic situation.” Like Ray-field, however, Killian also testified that Turner was “[c]oherent and lucid” and seemed to be a normal person.
The defense then called Detective John Zipperer of the Sheriffs Office in Jacksonville. Zipperer encountered Turner four times before the murders. He testified that Turner did not exhibit any bizzare behavior in his presence and that Turner appeared “quite normal.”
The next witness, Russell Kimball, was an eyewitness to the stabbing of Joyce. Kimball testified that Turner did not respond to people throwing rocks at him, that Turner “wasn’t concerned” with any of the onlookers, and that Turner did not stop stabbing Joyce even as the police cars drove by. According to Kimball, after Turner was in the police car he looked “like as if nothing had happened, wondered what the heck was going on” and Turner “had no kind of emotion about him[self] at all.”
The defense then elicited testimony from Dr. Daniel Stinson, a licensed psychiatrist, about Turner’s mental health. On three separate occasions, Dr. Stinson met with Turner to determine whether Turner “was insane or sane at the time of the murders committed on July 3, 1984.” Dr. Stinson testified that Turner “seemed to come from a close family” and that Turner’s “Catholic religion seemed to be important to him.” Dr. Stinson explained that Turner was the oldest of six children and that Turner stated that “his father and mother were everything parents should be, that he was disciplined with a belt, but that he did not discipline his children with a belt.” Turner stated that he and his family “were devout Catholics.” Dr. Stin-son testified that Turner “was a graduate of high school and ... had approximately two years of junior college and then .!. some training in electricity.”
Regarding Turner’s service in Vietnam, Dr. Stinson testified that Turner “was in the military, had served in Viet Nam, had served in some combat, had at one time achieved the rank of sergeant, had gotten in some difficulty and lost a stripe and had an honorable discharge.” Regarding Turner’s present employment with the DOT, Dr. Stinson said that Turner “liked his job.... He thought he was doing well in it ... [and] he had gotten a commendation ... sometime in the past year for helping some lady out of some trouble.”
Turner informed Dr. Stinson that he was “very close to his family, his children.” Dr. Stinson testified that Turner’s marriage began to deteriorate in 1982. As *1256 part of this marital discord, Dr. Stinson noted that Shirley “had passed some bad checks” and “had called the police on [Turner] when he felt that he had done nothing” to justify calling the police. Dr. Stin-son characterized the relationship between Turner and his wife as “hostile-depen-dant,” where “a person ... is very dependent on the other person and at the same time a lot of hostility is engendered by the very dependency.”
Consistent with this hostility, Dr. Stin-son testified that Turner was subject to a court restraining order, which provided that Turner “shall have no contact” with Shirley or their children and that Turner “shall not harass, threaten or intimidate” Shirley or their children. Turner also told Dr. Stinson that “he slapped or pushed his wife around a bit,” although he “claimed that he had not actually hit her as [in] hitting her with a fist and did not hurt her.” By February 1984, “their relationship really deteriorated,” and Shirley left Turner. Turner told Dr. Stinson that his wife was working as a prostitute and “talking about lesbian relationships” about the time that she left him.
Dr. Stinson further testified that Turner tried to persuade Shirley to come back to him “through talking to her, contacting her, [and] calling her.” Turner also informed Dr. Stinson that Shirley “tried to have him Baker [A]eted,” which is “a commitment procedure through which people may be committed if they refuse voluntary treatment and are either dangerous to themselves or others.” 7 After a physical altercation with his wife, Turner was taken to a local hospital that acted as the receiving center for all Baker Act patients. Turner told Dr. Stinson that he was “kept for 45 minutes for an evaluation by the psychiatric evaluator and released.”
Turner also indicated to Dr. Stinson that Shirley had moved in with “her lesbian friend and pimp.” Turner told Dr. Stinson that his daughter Anetra informed him of sexual behavior at the house. Turner admitted to Dr. Stinson “to having gone by the house several times and hearing various goings-on in the house, which he presumed to be times of sexual orgy. He may have even looked through the window pri- or to the time of the murder.”
Regarding the murders, Turner told Dr. Stinson that he “didn’t remember very much at all about it.” Dr. Stinson ultimately diagnosed Turner as suffering from a “dissociative reaction,” which he described as a “type of amnesia.” Dr. Stin-son based his diagnosis in large part on Turner remembering that, during the stabbing, his wife had “no face.”
Dr. Stinson testified that Turner also said that he saw Shirley “having intercourse with another man” the night before the murders. Dr. Stinson opined that this event “is when [Turner] really became psychotic and the psychotic process started and culminated with the events of the murders.” Dr. Stinson stated that “people, even who are psychotic, still have the same normal defenses left and you can appeal to them at some normal level,” and that such responsiveness could explain Turner’s compliance with police commands.
Dr. Stinson also explained that Turner suffered from “a brief psychotic episode or reaction” and that Turner was legally insane at the time of the murders. According to Dr. Stinson, such a diagnosis would *1257 be accurate even if Turner had stopped stabbing Joyce as the police drove by. Dr. Stinson further concluded that during the course of the murders, Turner “was not able to reason accurately and that he was not in control of his faculties.” Dr. Stin-son described Turner as “delusional,” but also “that at some level Mr. Turner knew what he was doing.” Dr. Stinson opined, however, that Turner did know the consequences of his actions and that Turner “may well have thought that he was right in what he was doing, that he did not believe he was wrong.” Consistent with such an opinion, Dr. Stinson stated that Turner “was without remorse.... [Turner] felt that if he had it all to do over again, he probably would.” After Dr. Stin-son’s testimony, the defense rested.
D. State’s Rebuttal Witnesses in Guilt Phase
For its first rebuttal witness, the State called Dr. George Barnard, a forensic psychiatrist, who conducted a court-ordered evaluation of Turner. Dr. Barnard first testified about Turner generally. Although Turner had no serious medical injuries, Turner had a rhythm disturbance in his heart with some scar tissue. According to Dr. Barnard, Turner’s “only period of abusing alcohol as given by his history was he was drinking about a fifth a day for six months when he was in Viet Nam.” Turner never had attempted suicide and, prior to the murders, had no history of psychiatric treatment. Dr. Barnard reported that Turner was “placed on medicine for treatment of depression” after his arrest for the murders.
In describing Turner’s educational background, Dr. Barnard testified that Turner told him that “he had basically no learning problems while in school, ... got along well with the teachers and the students, ... [and] had no special education indicating any learning disability.” Dr. Barnard concluded that Turner “[s]eemed to have a stable job history.”
Dr. Barnard also testified extensively about Turner’s service in the armed forces. Turner told Dr. Barnard that “he went into the Air Force in May, 1965, was honorably discharged in November, 1968, that his highest rank was a sergeant, he never had gone AWOL but received Article 15 [military discipline] for being off the post and lost a stripe. He was an MP and later [in] a Ranger outfit, was in combat, as a security policeman.” Turner further told Dr. Barnard that “he was in Viet Nam for six months in combat security police, that he was in combat but never injured, that he did some killing with a gun as the enemy was trying to overrun the position, that he had some friends who were killed.” Dr. Barnard asked Turner if “killing bothered him and he said, no, that he was trained for it, that it didn’t phase [sic] him ... he was trained to kill with close combat tactics and I asked him about knives and he said yes.” With respect to the significance of this training, Dr. Barnard stated:
I think that the significance comes in the sense that he would have had the behaviors of using weapons and have had the experience of, you know, having gone through it and that would be different from somebody who had not had that type of experience. I did not get the flavor from him as I have in some of them who I have examined that he deprived [sic] pleasure from some of this killing or injuring process.
Regarding the marital discord, Dr. Barnard testified that Turner did not see divorce as an option because of his Catholic religion. Turner additionally told Dr. Barnard:
[T]hat he could not remember some of the details specifically surrounding the alleged crime. He gave me the history *1258 that he and his wife had had serious marital problems for some time, they had been separated, that he was greatly distressed over the separation and the circumstances of where she and their child was [sic] living, that he had tried to talk to her on a number of occasions to get her to come back, that she had refused to do so. He felt that this was contrary to the way that he had been raised and the way he thought that a family should be.... He told me that on the day preceding the criminal event that he had worked and got off from work about midnight, he had gone by the place where she was living and he thought that he heard her having intercourse with some man and that he went home after this feeling upset and went to bed, went to sleep, had some nightmares and his next memory was being questioned by the police at the time of his arrest.
Dr. Barnard further testified that Turner believed that his wife was having a lesbian affair with Joyce in the presence of his daughter, Anetra.
Regarding Turner’s mental condition at the time of the murders, Dr. Barnard opined that he “felt that [Turner] was legally sane at the time” and that Turner “did have the ability to reason accurately,” knew what he was doing, and “did know the wrongfulness” of his actions. Specifically, Dr. Barnard explained that Turner “was selective in the individuals he attacked, disregarding harming others about, that he responded to the officer at the time and was able to give indication that the woman [Joyce], who was one of the victims, had really screwed up his family.” Dr. Barnard also specifically rejected a diagnosis of “brief reactive psychosis” (i.e., Dr. Stinson’s diagnosis). Furthermore, Dr. Barnard testified that Turner believed that he was morally justified in committing the murders and that Turner felt “justified to feel enraged at her [ (his wife) ] because of what she was doing ... to him and the family.”
The State then elicited testimony from Dr. Ernest Miller, a psychiatrist at University Hospital in Jacksonville, who also conducted a court-ordered examination of Turner. Dr. Miller concluded that Turner “was not insane at the time of the alleged commission of the crime” and “was able to stand trial.” Dr. Miller testified that Turner was “unable to recall the sequence of events which occurred during the crime period ... [except] a few fragments before the crime [and] some fragments after being arrested.”
Regarding Turner’s mental health history, Dr. Miller testified that “there was no history of [mental illness], per se. He had not previously been treated by a psychiatrist, nor were there any hospitalizations .... He had undergone a mental evaluation under a Baker Act proceeding, ... [but][h]e was never admitted under the Baker Act.” 8 Although Turner’s wife had reported violent behavior and a personality change by Turner, Dr. Miller testified that the diagnosis after Turner’s Baker Act evaluation on March 3, 1984, was marital problems. Turner was not viewed as “instantly dangerous,” as follows:
his wife had apparently imputed to him that he had made alleged homicidal threats to her, had shown violent behavior and refused to go to the hospital. She saw him as having a personality change, talking to himself. The patient on examination explained that he was presently in divorce proceedings and had arguments with her about [her] and her seven year old daughter and his accusations that his wife was engaging *1259 in homosexual contacts. The examiner at that point felt that he was in -good reality contact, was not depressed or agitated to the point that he was viewed as instantly dangerous.... Diagnosis, suffering marital problems.
Dr. Miller testified that based on that diagnosis, there was no basis to deprive Turner of his civil liberties.
Regarding Turner’s physical health, Dr. Miller testified that Turner “reported that he had an irregular heartbeat, had hypertension and had reported scar tissue in his heart.” Dr. Miller classified these infirmities as “psycho-physiologic problems.”
Dr. Miller then testified about Turner’s employment history, particularly in the electrical trade. Dr. Miller also reported that Turner “served in the United States Armed Forces for a couple of years [and] received an honorable discharge.” Dr. Miller recounted that Turner “was an Air Force enlisted man, attained a non-commissioned rank at one point in his career, served in Viet Nam, did have some combat experience, did have some problems in the service ... but did receive a good discharge.” According to Dr. Miller, Turner related some of his combat experience, telling him that “[h]e fired in the direction of enemy troops, he saw no foe fall as a direct result of his fire. He was not involved in any atrocities.” Turner was involved in “fire fights in terms of being responsible for the machine gunning on the perimeter of the Air Force bases.” Turner “described his responsibility as, the perimeter defense of the Air Force bases at night.” Turner, however, “did not ... witness directly any of his buddies being killed.” Dr. Miller further testified that Turner never mentioned any hand-to-hand combat in Vietnam and that Turner “never tried to make [him] think that government had trained him to kill.”
Turner informed Dr. Miller that, at the time of the murders, he was not using alcohol or controlled substances and did not “have a problem in habitual use of alcohol or drugs.” Turner said that he drank in Vietnam and that “it was a problem for him in the service from time to time.”
Dr. Miller opined that Turner did not have a mental disease or defect, but that Turner “did ■ have an emotional distur-' bance, he was depressed and anxious related to the situation in which he immediately found himself, facing a psychiatrist, facing a legal proceeding, facing the loss of many things in his life.” Dr. Miller testified that at the time of the murders Turner “was in a very highly charged emotional state so that his behavior was not always consistent with and in consonant with the progression of rational thought.” Dr. Miller “did not think, however, at any time that [Turner’s] behavior ... could be described unequivocally and clearly as insane during the progression of the [murders].” According to Dr. Miller, psychological testing performed on Turner indicated that Turner had “a characterologic problem” and was “a man who might ... conceivably, under stress, regress to a psychotic state.”
Regarding the multiple wounds to the two victims, Dr. Miller testified that there were “an inordinate number of stab wounds and [that] in some cases ... this tends to correlate with, at the very least, a highly charged emotional state and sometimes with psychotic state and sometimes with an insane state.” Dr. Miller further testified how and why the victims were chosen purposefully, as follows:
[t]he circumstances of the murder were such as to suggest ... that this was not just simply a random senseless act, that the victims were chosen purposefully, that they had, rightly or wrongly, in his beliefs contributed in some manner to his unhappiness and to his sense of loss, that his wife had left him, had taken *1260 their children and that the other victim was an actor in this drama, that the other woman, Ms. Joyce, had induced or seduced his wife away from him and if it wasn’t for her, his wife would still probably be home.... [Turner] had been brooding over this and felt anger, rage and a need for punishing people.
Dr. Miller stated that “there’s a great deal of significance in the number of stab wounds used here, the obvious over-kill” and that the number of stab wounds indicated “the incredible amount of emotional content that was reverberating through the mind of this man at the time of the alleged crime.” Furthermore, Dr. Miller described the events “as a passionate interchange at the time of the stabbing rather than a thoughtfully subjected knife wound delivery.”
Dr. Miller disagreed with Dr. Stinson’s diagnosis that Turner suffered from a “brief reactive psychosis” at the time of the crimes. Dr. Miller, however, did acknowledge that Turner had encountered an “acute stressor ... the previous night ... when he had reportedly heard or seen his wife engaged in some sexual liaison, apparently in the presence of Anetra, his daughter, and this was sensitive, incensed him.” According to Dr. Miller, that encounter “was certainly a stressor, but there was certainly a time lag between that particular acute stressor and the violence by [Turner] on the following day.” Dr. Miller concluded that Turner “honestly believed that his wife was having a lesbian affair and [was] a prostitute in [Joyce’s] house in the presence of his children.” Dr. Miller further opined that if Turner’s wife was neither a lesbian nor a prostitute, yet Turner still believed she was, “it would be a delusional belief.” 9
Regarding Turner’s family medical history, Dr. Miller particularly mentioned Turner’s sister, who died of a brain tumor at age fourteen, and his severely retarded younger brother. According to Dr. Miller, “[t]he likelihood of a brain tumor having a genetic transmissibility is minute. The presence of an intellectual handicap could represent a genetic potential. However, there was no indication ... that an intellectual handicap of any substance exists with Mr. Turner so these are familial features I think are of doubtful consequence.”
Dr. Miller further reported that Turner “was Catholic and this was important for him in maintaining the marriage.” He stated that Turner tried to “prevail upon [Shirley] to see a priest for counseling and she refused.”
Dr. Miller also testified that his report referenced a heroism award given to Turner in 1983, recognizing his efforts to prevent a woman from being kidnapped. Dr. Miller opined that the event “indicated very positive moral approach toward other human beings [and] problem solving.”
Dr. Miller explained that Turner’s home burned down, the insurance did not cover the repairs, no one would lend Turner money to repair it, and Turner rebuilt the house himself. Immediately thereafter, Turner’s family had “another financial disaster” when Shirley mismanaged a day nursery and subsequently wrote bad checks. Outlining other catastrophic events in Turner’s life from 1982 through 1984, Dr. Miller testified that Turner:
had other catastrophic events occur in his life, problems on the job, he suffered a heart attack, had to be evaluated and *1261 treated for that, and then in 1984 or late ’83 he tried to provide an apartment for her to induce her to return ... to him. She would not do so. Having been, in his view, under the control of Ms. Joyce, under the persuasion of Ms. Joyce during that time.
Dr. Miller agreed that these factors contributed to Turner’s anger and rage.
Dr. Miller also described Turner as having “hot-blood” and described the term as “behavior in an individual who is filled with emotion, negative emotion, not positive emotion, not love, but hate and rage, fear.” According to Dr. Miller, Turner was not insane at the time of the murders, but could have “suffered an isolated explosive disorder,” although in his opinion Turner did not. Dr. Miller stated that such a disorder is a “recognized mental disease, infirmity or defect.” Dr. Miller also opined that Turner suffered from “a dissociation” at the time of the murders and that this was “the mind’s protective device to block out the horrible experience.” Dr. Miller explained that he was “unable to conclude on the basis of what [he] knew that [the murders] had been a premeditated act.”
At the conclusion of the State’s rebuttal evidence, the defense again moved for a judgment of acquittal based on sufficiency of the evidence regarding the murders and Turner’s insanity. The state trial court denied the motion. On August 16, 1985, the jury found Turner guilty of two counts of first-degree murder for the deaths of Shirley and Joyce.
E. Penalty Phase of Turner’s Trial
Seven days after the guilty verdicts, the penalty phase of Turner’s trial began on August 23, 1985. Before the penalty phase began, however, Turner’s lawyers moved for a continuance for additional time to prepare for the penalty phase. Turner’s lawyers asserted that the only material they could present the day the penalty hearing was scheduled was “only what [they had] been able to obtain in the last five days” leading up to the penalty hearing and that their “primary concern was sufficient time to prepare and that [August 23] did not afford [them] that time.” The trial court explained on the record (a) that the parties had agreed to the date of August 23 and (b) that due to the unavailability of a juror as of August 24th or August 26th, 10 that date was the only date that worked. The trial court then denied the motion for a continuance.
1. Defense Witnesses
During the penalty phase of Turner’s trial, the State presented no evidence and the defense called six additional witnesses. The first defense witness was Turner’s brother, Gregory Turner. Gregory described a defense exhibit as a group photograph of all his siblings, including Turner taken at least twenty-five years before the trial. 11 He described another photograph *1262 as a picture of Turner in the Air Force taken between 1965 and 1969. Gregory-then read a prepared letter to the jury.
In the letter, Gregory described Turner’s family, including his younger sister, Debra, who died at fourteen from a brain tumor, and his younger brother, Michael, who is profoundly retarded with Down’s syndrome. According to Gregory, Turner, as the oldest child, “set an example for the rest of [the children]” and was their “protector.” Gregory described Turner’s childhood generally, including his involvement in church, the Boy Scouts, and school activities. Turner was the “first to leave for an extended period of time” when he went to college, but Turner returned when Debra died from the brain tumor. Gregory recalled that Turner joined the Air Force in an “effort to deal with her death.”
Gregory further explained that Turner initially had a happy marriage. He recounted that Turner “was a good, devoted father” and “took his religious obligations to his daughters very seriously.... When he learned that Anetra had received her first communion, he broke down and cried.” Turner was concerned about his daughters and his family even after his incarceration. Gregory also said that Turner continued to be religious while incarcerated, leading Bible discussions and having “a positive influence on him[self] and other inmates in his block.”
The defense next elicited testimony from Joseph Johnson, the then records custodian for the Duval County School Board and Turner’s former teacher at Douglas Anderson High School, from which Turner graduated in the early 1960s. Johnson testified about Turner’s school records, which included Turner’s “cumulus guidance folder,” his grades, “an evaluation of social and personal assets,” and “his personal interests.” The records indicated that Turner had a 72 IQ and that he planned on going to college and “becoming a - member of the military, the Armed Forces.” These school records were admitted and published to the jury. From his personal recollection of Turner as a student, Johnson further testified that Turner “was a humble, meek, a very gentle person,” and that Turner “seemed to have gotten along quite well with [other students].”
The defense then called Frank Lee, an assistant maintenance engineer with the Florida DOT. Lee testified about Turner’s personnel records with the DOT, which included performance ratings and pay. These records also were admitted into evidence.
The defense next called Mark Ballard, a maintenance electrician for the Florida DOT and Turner’s immediate supervisor for two to three years. Ballard testified that Turner was “an excellent employee. He took very little supervision. You could tell him to do something, you didn’t have to worry about it being done right.... If he saw something that needed to be done, you didn’t have to tell him to do it, he’d go ahead and do it.”
Supervisor Ballard also described a newspaper article recounting the time when he and Turner prevented a kidnapping and rape from occurring. Ballard noted that he and Turner had received an award for their intervention and rescue. He described a letter from State Representative William Bankhead to the Secretary of the DOT recommending that “their actions be rewarded and that a special commendation be placed in their employment files.” The newspaper article, the letter from Representative Bankhead, a response from DOT Secretary Paul Pap-pas 12 commending Turner for his bravery, *1263 and the medal given to Turner were all admitted into evidence and published to the jury.
The defense then elicited testimony from Dr. Miller, one of the forensic psychologists who testified for the State during the guilt phase. Dr. Miller testified that Turner “was of borderline intelligence,” meaning that he was at a state “between normal intelligence and defective intelligence.” Dr. Miller opined that Turner’s borderline intelligence “limit[ed] Mr. Turner in terms of options which he might choose to exercise to solve his problems with respect to the decedents. He does not have, for instance, if you will, the wit to conceive alternative plans of dealing with these difficulties in his life.”
Dr. Miller further explained that, on the morning of the murders, Turner was “suffering from extreme emotional disturbance” and that “a combination of rage and fear ..., though very great and very disturbing to him subjectively and though [ajffecting his behavior in consonance with the disturbance, did not ... cause him to cross the line where he did not know what he was doing, the nature, quality and wrongfulness of it.”
Dr. Miller concluded that Turner’s capacity to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or conform his conduct to the requirements of law was “substantially impaired.” Dr. Miller explained that Turner felt legal or moral justification for the murders because he “was rightly or wrongly convinced and believed that his daughter was being subjected to unorthodox and potentially damaging sexual exhibitions. He otherwise viewed the environment as unwholesome.”
As its sixth and final witness, the defense called William L. Turner, Turner’s father. William first described a family photo containing all of his children at Turner’s grandmother’s house. William recalled how Turner assisted his parents in raising his younger brother, Michael, who was severely retarded and suffered from Down’s syndrome. William and his wife “dedicated [their] life to this family and raising the family in our home.” William considered his “close” relationship with his son Turner as “one of the best.” As Turner’s father, William “used to attend every football game, watch him in practice, carry him to all the scout meetings, [and] attended his scout camp out, Camp Cahooche.” William recalled that Turner used to attend church every Sunday, said the rosary every day, and received religious instruction almost daily.
William further testified that Turner “had the finest relationship” with his siblings, “that he was a good protector for them, [and] they had a lot of fun.” He reported that Turner got along with the neighbors and “did a lot of chores around the house.” Turner also aided his mother in caring for her senile father and assisted with his father’s tailoring business by ironing and pressing the clothing.
William then related how Turner left home for the first time to attend Gibbs Junior College and that he attended that school for two years. He recalled that Turner returned home to help his mother care for his fourteen-year old sister dying of a brain tumor. After his sister died, Turner informed his father that he could not study anymore and did not want to go back to school. Instead, he enlisted in the Air Force.
The defense then showed William Turner several exhibits already entered into evidence. These included a Certificate of Enlistment, an award for small arms marksmanship, and his son’s honorable discharge. William noted that Turner “was so proud of’ the marksmanship award. Turner communicated often with his family while he was in the Air Force and whenever possible while in Vietnam. *1264 William testified that Turner received “two or three awards given [to] him” in connection with his Vietnam service.
William also explained that after Turner was discharged from the Air Force, he returned to Jacksonville, held several different jobs, and went to school. According to William, Turner got married around 1969, went to work for the DOT, and Turner’s hours varied depending on any emergencies with the bridges in Jacksonville. William commented that Turner and Shirley had a home together until it was destroyed by a fire. He recalled that Turner said that insurance would only pay eighty percent and that Turner would rebuild the house himself. William, recounted that Turner “put a big effort in rebuilding that home until he had ... a heart attack” and was hospitalized.
William remained in “close contact” with Turner during Turner’s marital difficulties, and Turner “would come over to the house for financial help to support his family. They would get bags of groceries [and] they would get financial help.” Turner informed William that he met with a family mediator in an attempt to resolve his marital problems. Turner also told William that he wanted his children to be raised in the church.
After Turner’s father testified, the defense rested. The State presented no rebuttal evidence in the penalty phase. Turner’s father, thus, was the last witness in the trial.
2. Jury Instructions in Penalty Phase
After closing arguments by the State and the defense, the trial court instructed the jurors about its advisory sentence. The court explained that it was the jury’s “duty to advise the Court as to what punishment should be imposed upon the defendant for his crimes of murder in the first degree.” The court informed the jury that it was to “render to the Court an advisory sentence based upon [its] determination as to whether sufficient aggravating circumstances exist to justify the imposition of the death penalty and whether sufficient mitigating evidence exists to outweigh any aggravating circumstances found to exist.”
The trial court also instructed the jury that it should consider evidence from both the guilt and penalty phases. For example, the court instructed the jury that its “advisory sentence should be based upon the evidence that you have heard while trying the guilt or innocence of the defendant and the evidence that has been presented to you in these proceedings.” (Emphasis added).
The trial court also informed the jury about both the aggravating and mitigating factors. The court instructed the jury that it could consider these four aggravating circumstances: (1) Turner had previously been convicted of another violent capital offense, even though occurring simultaneously with the conviction of another capital felony; (2) the crime was committed while Turner was engaged in attempting to commit, committing, or fleeing from the crime of burglary; (3) the crime Turner committed was “especially wicked, evil, atrocious or cruel”; and (4) the crime was committed in a “cold, calculated and premeditated manner without any pretense of moral or legal justification.”
Regarding mitigating circumstances, the trial court instructed the jury it could consider: (1) whether the crime for which Turner was to be sentenced was “committed while he was under the influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance”; (2) whether Turner’s capacity to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of law was substantially impaired; (3) any other aspects of Turner’s character or record and any other circumstance of the offense.
*1265 After deliberations, the jury, by a seven to five vote, returned an advisory sentence of life imprisonment without possibility of parole for twenty-five years for Turner’s murder of Shirley. The jury, also by a seven to five vote, returned an advisory sentence of the death penalty for Turner’s murder of Joyce. The advisory sentences were rendered on August 23,1985.
2. Sentencing Hearing Before Trial Judge
On October 3, 1985, prior to imposing a sentence, the state trial court conducted an additional hearing. At this hearing, the court allowed the State and Turner to submit additional material to be considered by the court in determining Turner’s sentences. At this October 3 hearing, defense counsel specifically requested additional time to obtain Turner’s military records from the federal government to assist the defense in obtaining mitigating testimony from Turner’s superior officers. The trial court expressly instructed the parties that they could continue to supplement the record with additional material: “If there are any written records that can be obtained within a reasonable period of time, they may be supplemented as far as adding them for purpose of sentencing without any further hearings.”
Accordingly, the defense submitted several memoranda between the October 3 hearing and the trial court’s sentencing of Turner on November 1. First, the defense submitted a memorandum of law requesting that the trial court “consider the existence of any mental disturbance as a significant statutory mitigating factor.” The defense’s memorandum emphasized that even if Turner’s mental disturbance was not statutorily extreme, the court still must consider “non-extreme” mental disturbance as nonstatutory mitigation. This memorandum recounted the trial testimony from the psychiatrists and Turner’s family regarding the stresses Turner felt from the break-up of his family.
The defense submitted another memorandum regarding sentencing generally, in which it outlined “certain matters [that were] conclusive and to the Defendant’s benefit for sentencing purposes.” This memorandum summarized evidence of Turner’s employment, family relationships (noting specifically that Turner’s children were being raised Catholic despite the fact that his wife was not Catholic, indicating a strong paternal influence), and military history (noting that Turner enlisted for duty in Vietnam). This memorandum also pointed out that the penalty phase evidence about Turner’s heroic acts at the DOT demonstrated that Turner “had an extraordinary sense of right and wrong when not confronted with or succumbing to the emotional turmoil of his immediate family problems.” This memorandum also argued that the death penalty would not be a proportional punishment for Turner’s crime since it was “committed as a result of violent domestic difficulties.” This memorandum also contained comments from Detective Zipperer urging the trial court not to sentence Turner to death. Detective Zipperer had encountered Turner on several occasions prior to the murders.
Attached to this second memorandum were numerous exhibits relating to Turner’s mental health (including evaluations by each psychiatrist who testified at trial, a psychological profile by a clinical psychologist who did not testify at trial, and orders from the Baker Act proceeding), the domestic restraining order against Turner, and papers from the Turners’ divorce proceedings, including the divorce petition and a family mediation referral. Specifically, the psychiatric evaluations were reports from Dr. Stinson, Dr. Miller, and Dr. Barnard, each of whom testified from their respective reports at trial.
*1266 Dr. Stinson’s report closely mirrored his trial testimony. Additional relevant details in his report were that (1) on the morning of the murders, Turner only wanted to pick up his daughter and denied planning to kill anyone, (2) Turner is currently depressed and still has nightmares, and (3) while in Vietnam, Turner was under sniper fire at one time, and after he returned to the United States, Turner, for a while, would hit the dirt when lightning flashed.
Dr. Miller’s report also reflected his trial testimony. Additional relevant details in his report were that (1) Turner was convinced Shirley’s friends were trying to kill him, (2) Turner never carried a weapon to protect himself, (3) Turner “remembers poignantly one time his little daughter waiving at him from the window when he tried to see her, and then someone stopping the child,” (4) Turner received a Good Conduct Medal and a Vietnam Campaign Medal for his service in the Air Force, (5) Turner never came to the attention of the Juvenile Courts in his youth, and (6) Turner had dreams of Vietnam for a year or so after his tour of duty.
Dr. Barnard’s report also echoed his trial testimony. Additional relevant details contained in his report were that (1) Turner saw his wife “feeling another man up” on one occasion, while the man and Turner’s wife laughed at him and (2) Turner was never expelled or suspended from school.
Finally, in a third memorandum entitled “Memorandum in Aid of Sentencing,” the defense analyzed (1) whether there was any reason for the court to reject the jury recommendation of life in prison for Turner’s murder of Shirley and (2) whether the record disclosed strong rationales why reasonable persons could not agree with a sentence of death for Turner’s murder of Joyce. Regarding the recommended death sentence, this third memorandum analyzes the lack of aggravating and the presence of mitigating circumstances. This memorandum points out that “Mitigation is not limited to the statutorily enumerated factors and need not be proven to any certain standard.” The memorandum then recounts all of the mitigating evidence available, including (1) Turner’s “extreme mental or emotional disturbance,” (2) Turner’s capacity to appreciate the criminality of his conduct was substantially impaired, (3) Turner had no significant history of violent criminal activity, (4) Turner’s service in Vietnam, (5) Turner was a good family man and father, (6) Turner was a diligent and conscientious employee, and (7) Turner previously had demonstrated unselfishness and concern for others.
At this same October 3, 1985 hearing, the trial court also reviewed Turner’s PSI with both parties. The PSI contained (a) general background information on Turner, much of which came out through trial testimony and (b) information regarding Turner’s tumultuous and often violent relationship with Shirley. The PSI discussed two separate instances in which Turner committed battery on Shirley. During one incident, Turner rammed his car into a car that Shirley was driving, threatened to kill her, engaged the police in a high-speed car chase, and was found with a revolver in his car.
After reviewing the PSI, the trial court at this October 3 hearing heard arguments from the State and the defense regarding the presence of aggravating and mitigating circumstances. 13 The court then scheduled the sentencing for November 1,1985.
*1267 J. Turner’s Sentence
On November 1, 1985, the state trial court sentenced Turner after “deliberating] the jury’s conclusion for many weeks, weighing the advisory sentence, and reviewing the evidence to determine the presence of aggravating and mitigating circumstances.” 14 The trial court adopted the jury’s recommendations and sentenced Turner to life in prison without possibility of parole for twenty-five years for the murder of Shirley and to death for the murder of Joyce.
Before announcing the death sentence, the trial court made extensive findings regarding the aggravating and mitigating circumstances. Because this appeal focuses so heavily on those circumstances, we recount the trial court’s findings in great detail, as follows:
The statutory aggravating circumstances. The Court finds that the aggravating circumstances set forth in Florida Statute 921.1415 little A, C, E, F and G are inapplicable in this case. However, the provision of Florida Statute 921.1415 B, D, H and I are applicable as set forth below.
Number one, the defendant previously [was] convicted of another capital felony involving the use of threat or violence to the person. The defendant stands convicted of first degree murder in the death of Shirley Turner in count one of the indictment in the instant ease. While each conviction may operate as an aggravating factor to the other, it would appear more proper to consider these convictions in the chronological order in which the murders occurred. This consideration may also explain the jury’s recommendation as to each count. This is the most significant factor considered by the Court in imposing sentence.
Number two, the capital felony was committed while the defendant was engaged in the commission of an enumerated felony under Florida Statute 921.1415D. The evidence is clear that the defendant committed the murder while engaging in the commission of or attempt to commit or flight after committing or attempting to commit the crime of burglary.
The evidence at trial was uncontro-verted that the defendant broke into 1053 West Monroe Street, the residence of Joyce Brown, without her consent and with the intent to commit an offense therein.
Three, the capital felony was especially heinous, atrocious or cruel. The victim, Joyce Brown, was stabbed and slashed 51 times by a knife in the hand of the defendant. This was done on the expressway exit street in Jacksonville in the presence of numerous witnesses who were attempting to detract or stop the defendant by throwing objects at him. At the time of her death, Joyce Brown was in telephonic communication with the Jacksonville Sheriffs Office and her fear, terror and emotional strain preceding her death are clearly evidenced by the tape recording of her last moments.
The defendant began and completed his vicious attack despite the pleadings of the victim.
Four, the capital felony was a homicide and was committed in a cold, calculated and premeditated manner without any pretense of moral or legal justification. The defendant had previously *1268 threatened to kill his wife, Shirley Turner, and on the day of the crime came to the residence armed with a single shot shotgun and knife. After repeatedly loading, firing and reloading the shotgun and firing into the house, the defendant physically broke into the house and murdered his wife, Shirley Turner, by stabbing her 22 times. Shirley Turner was one of four occupants in the house at that time and the evidence is clear that the defendant selected his target in a cold, calculated and premeditated manner.
During this attack Joyce Brown fled the residence and ran to a nearby telephone [booth] where she made contact with the Jacksonville Sheriffs Office. The defendant, with sufficient time to contemplate his actions, carefully chose his second victim. He pursued Joyce Brown, confronted her and accomplished his purpose and only ceased his attack when police officers arrived on the scene. Those are the aggravating factors.
Statutory mitigating circumstances considered by the Court. The mitigating circumstances set forth in Florida Statute 921.1416 C, D, E and G are not applicable in the instant case. The first circumstance considered by the Court, the defendant has no significant history of prior criminal activity.. The defendant’s prior criminal record is set forth in the presentence investigation. While it may be argued that the record is insignificant, it must be noted that one prior arrest and plea of nolo con-tendere was on a charge of battery to Shirley Turner and that pleas of nolo contend[e]re to fleeing and attempting to elude police, reckless driving and leaving the scene of an accident resulted from his ramming a car driven by Shirley Turner and then fleeing the police. When apprehended the defendant threatened to kill Shirley Turner and stated that he had a gun which was found in his possession.
Viewed in light of the instant case, the defendant’s prior criminal activity cannot be considered insignificant.
Three, the capital felony was committed while the defendant was under the influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance. There is ample evidence to support the conclusion that the defendant was under the influence of mental or emotional disturbance. This was demonstrated by the defendant’s actions and behavior during the year preceding the murders and expressed by the opinions of the experts who testified at the sentencing hearing. While there has been a conflict in the trial testimony of the psychiatric experts, the Court finds that the defendant suffered from no mental disease or defect. Whatever mental or emotional disturbance existed in the defendant at the time of the commission of the crimes had existed for a period of time and there was no evidence — or excuse me — there were no sudden events which would trigger any escalation of the disturbance. Additionally, it appeared that the defendant was perfectly capable of performing his job and getting along well with fellow employees. The keyword in evaluating this mitigating circumstance is extreme. The assertion that the defendant was under the influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance is specifically rejected as a mitigating circumstance.
Four, the capacity of the defendant to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of law was substantially impaired. This circumstance is obviously closely akin to that of extreme mental or emotional disturbance and the Court and jury must rely on much of the same evidence in weighing these factors. The testimony of the psychiatric experts has *1269 been given careful consideration by the Court, but other facts established by the evidence are that the defendant stopped his attack on Joyce Brown when a police car passed on the street and resumed the attack after the passing and, further, that when confronted by Officer Venosh shortly after the murder, the defendant responded to the officer’s commands at gunpoint.
While there is ample evidence to find that the defendant was impaired, the Court specifically rejects the contention that the capacity of the defendant to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law was substantially impaired.
The defendant has produced evidence of the following non-statutory factors. One, the defendant served his country honorably in time of war. The Court finds this factor to exist, but must consider the fact that the defendant was discharged in 1968. The Court attaches no significance to this fact.
Two, the defendant was a good family man and father. The Court finds that this factor was not proven and rejects this assertion as a mitigating circumstance.
Three, the defendant was a diligent and conscientious employee. The Court finds that this factor was proven but attaches little significance as a mitigating circumstance.
Four, the defendant has in the past demonstrated concern for others and unselfishness. The Court find[s] that the defendant has exhibited such traits in the past but considers the weight of such mitigating circumstances to be only slight.
Based on these findings, the trial court sentenced Turner to death for the murder of Joyce.
F. Direct Appeal
On direct appeal, Turner raised twelve issues.
15
Before issuing its decision, the Florida Supreme Court “relinquished jurisdiction” over Turner’s direct appeal to the trial court for an evidentiary hearing on Turner’s absence from certain portions of trial, including voir dire. Only after an evidentiary hearing and order from the trial court summarizing its findings did the Florida Supreme Court issue its decision affirming Turner’s convictions and sentences:
See Turner v. State,
In its opinion, the Florida Supreme Court summarily determined that Turner’s first eight issues lacked merit.
Turner,
Third, the Florida Supreme Court concluded that the 911 tape was relevant to premeditation, that the “trial court has wide discretion concerning the admission of evidence,” and that Turner had “shown no abuse” by the trial court. Id. Fourth, the Court ruled that the trial court had correctly found that aggravating factors justifying the imposition of the death penalty were present. Turner challenged these three of the four aggravating factors: (1) that he was engaged in the commission of a burglary during the murder; (2) that the murder was especially heinous, atrocious, and cruel; and (3) that the murder was committed in a cold, calculated, and premeditated manner without any pretense of moral or legal justification. Id. at 50-51. The Florida Supreme Court disagreed with Turner’s contentions and found that each of these aggravating factors was present. Id.
After the Florida Supreme Court affirmed Turner’s convictions and sentences, the United States Supreme Court denied certiorari on February 21, 1989.
Turner v. Florida,
G. Rule S.850 Motion
On March 29, 1990, Florida’s Governor signed a death warrant ordering Turner’s execution. On April 26, 1990, Florida’s Office of the Capital Collateral Representative moved for a stay of execution in the Florida Supreme Court, asserting that it could not represent Turner and requesting that substitute counsel be appointed. The Florida Supreme Court granted a stay, and new counsel was appointed to represent Turner.
On October 15,1990, Turner filed a Rule 3.850 “Motion for Post Conviction Relief’ in the state trial court and an Appendix containing seventy-eight exhibits. 16 The exhibits in Turner’s Appendix include: (1) fifty-two affidavits from family members, witnesses, psychologists, coworkers,, and other people who knew Turner at varying points in his life; (2) military records and documents on Turner’s service in Vietnam; and (3) articles and book excerpts about the circumstances surrounding Turner’s tour of duty with the Air Force in Vietnam. At no point during the Rule 3.850 proceedings did the State attempt to dispute, rebut, or call into doubt any of the factual information submitted in Turner’s Appendix.
Turner’s Rule 3.850 motion alleged sixteen separate claims for relief. Turner’s Rule 3.850 motion specifically asserted, inter alia, that his trial counsel (1) failed to adequately investigate, prepare, and present mitigating circumstances in the penalty phase and (2) failed to investigate and arrange for consistent mental health assistance. 17
*1271 On November 6, 1990, and without a hearing, the trial court denied Turner’s Rule 3.850 motion. The trial court summarily concluded that the claims Turner litigated on direct appeal and then reasserted in his Rule 3.850 motion could not be challenged in that motion for postcon-viction relief. The trial court also summarily determined that any issues which Turner could have raised on direct appeal could not be brought for the first time in Turner’s Rule 3.850 postconviction relief proceedings. The trial court examined Turner’s ineffeetive-assistance-of-counsel claims in more detail, but ultimately concluded that Turner’s allegations were insufficient and his claims lacked merit.
The Florida Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s denial of Turner’s Rule 3.850 motion.
Turner v. Dugger,
The Florida Supreme Court further emphasized that “[t]he record also reveals that trial counsel presented evidence relating to Turner’s mental state at the time of the offense through the testimony of three mental health experts, two during the guilt phase and one in the penalty phase.”
Id.
The Court also pointed out that Turner’s counsel “argued in a presentence memorandum that there was sufficient evidence to constitute nonstatutory mitigation under
Lockett v. Ohio,
H. State Habeas Petition
At the same time Turner filed his Rule 3.850 motion in the state trial court, Turner also filed an “Amended Petition for Extraordinary Relief and for a Writ of Habeas Corpus” in the Florida Supreme Court. Turner’s Amended Petition raised these three issues: (1) that
Campbell v. State,
Regarding retroactive application of certain of its decisions that had been issued after Turner’s direct appeal, the Florida Supreme Court concluded that the argument was without merit because “none of the cases Turner relies on is such a ‘jurisprudential upheaval’ in the law as to require retroactive application on collateral attack.”
Id.
at 1080 (citing
Witt v. State,
I. § 225b- Petition
On July 15, 1993, Turner filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in federal district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Turner’s § 2254 petition raised these eleven claims: (1) ineffective assistance of state trial counsel at the guilt and penalty phases; (2) ineffective assistance of state appellate counsel; (3) denial of Turner’s right to be present during critical stages of his trial; (4) Florida courts’ failure to consider non-statutory mitigation evidence and factors; (5) Florida’s unconstitutionally vague aggravating circumstances that were incorporated in jury instructions at trial; (6) improper application of Florida’s capital sentencing statute; (7) lack of special verdicts at the guilt and penalty phases; (8) denial of due process stemming from introduction of the 911 tape and certain photographs; (9) improper burden shifting that required Turner to prove that death was not an appropriate sentence; (10) improper prosecutorial argument tainting the guilt and penalty phases; and (11) the Florida courts’ failure to grant Turner an evidentiary hearing required the federal court to conduct an evidentiary hearing.
Seven years after Turner’s § 2254 petition was filed, the district court dismissed several of Turner’s claims in an order entered on September 4, 2001. It dismissed Turner’s claim regarding the appropriateness of jury instructions as legally and proeedurally barred and dismissed Tur *1273 ner’s burden-shifting claims as proeedurally barred. The district court also struck Turner’s claim for an evidentiary hearing. On January 16, 2002, however, Turner filed another request for an evidentiary hearing.
On June 26, 2002, in an exhaustive 291-page order, the district court denied Turner’s request for an evidentiary hearing, denied his § 2254 petition, and dismissed the case with prejudice except for Turner’s mental retardation claim under
Atkins v. Virginia,
On September 20, 2002, Turner timely filed a petition for a certificate of appeala-bility in this Court. On November 27, 2002, this Court granted a certificate of appealability on (a) whether Turner received effective assistance of trial counsel during the penalty phase of trial and (b) whether Turner’s claim that his death sentence violated the Sixth Amendment under
Ring v. Arizona,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Turner filed his § 2254 petition in 1993, well prior to April 24, 1996, the effective date of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AED-PA”), Pub.L. No. 104-132 (1996), 28 U.S.C. § 2241,
et seq.
Therefore, Turner’s petition is governed by pre-AEDPA law.
Lindh v. Murphy,
In addition, the state court’s findings of fact are entitled to a presumption of correctness and may be ignored only if the petitioner shows by clear and convincing evidence that the state court’s determination was not “ ‘fairly supported by the record.’ ”
Griffin v. Wainwright,
*1274 III. INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL
Turner’s initial claim is that he received ineffective assistance of counsel during the penalty phase of his trial due to his trial counsel’s failure to present certain pieces of mitigating evidence. As part of that ineffective assistance claim, Turner first argues that the district court erred in not granting him an evidentiary hearing.
A. Evidentiary Hearing
The problem with Turner’s evidentiary hearing claim is that the State of Florida did not challenge, rebut, or dispute the factual statements contained in Turner’s seventy-eight exhibit Appendix, and, thus, there was no reason or basis for an evidentiary hearing on that claim. Where the material facts are in dispute, the federal court in habeas corpus proceedings holds an evidentiary hearing if the habeas applicant did not receive a full and fair evidentiary hearing in the state court.
Stinson v. Wainiwight,
Turner argues that he “is entitled to an evidentiary hearing if his allegations, taken as true, might merit relief.”
Harich v. Dugger,
Turner’s § 2254 petition also is not one in which an evidentiary hearing is required because “the relevant factual issues were not developed at the state level.”
Wiley v. Wainwright,
B. Principles Governing Ineffective Assistance Claims
We now turn to Turner’s claim that his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to present additional mitigating evidence during the penalty phase of the trial. Before addressing the merits of Turner’s claim, we outline the principles governing ineffective assistance of counsel claims. “The Sixth Amendment guarantees a criminal defendant the right of effective assistance of counsel during a capital sentencing hearing.”
Harris v. Dugger,
The test for ineffective assistance of counsel set forth in
Strickland v. Washington,
Trial counsel’s performance is entitled to “ ‘highly deferential’ judicial scrutiny.”
Fugate v. Head,
C. Mitigating Evidence Presented by Trial Counsel
We now address the merits of Turner’s argument that his trial counsel was ineffective during the penalty phase. Specifically, Turner contends that his trial counsel failed to investigate and to prepare mitigating evidence in four main areas: (1) severe mental illness at the time of the murders; (2) Vietnam combat duty; (3) exemplary citizenship; and (4) high potential for rehabilitation and good custodial conduct. 21 The gravamen of Turner’s § 2254 petition is that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to present the mitigating affidavits and other information contained in Turner’s seventy-eight exhibit Appendix submitted in his state and federal post-conviction proceedings. 22
*1277 Turner’s arguments in this regard fail for two reasons. First, as extensively recounted above, there was a wealth of mitigating evidence presented to the jury and the sentencing judge during the penalty and guilt phases of the trial, and the trial court specifically instructed the jury to consider this evidence in determining mitigating factors. 23 The trial court stated to the jury that its “advisory sentence should be based upon the evidence that you have heard while trying the guilt or innocence of the defendant and the evidence that has been presented to you in these [sentencing] proceedings.” More importantly, we agree with the district court that the additional information contained in Turner’s Appendix is largely cumulative to the mitigating evidence recounted above, which the jury and the trial court considered during Turner’s sentencing. We now discuss specifically each of the four main areas about which Turner complains. 24 By sparing no expense in our foundational discussion of the trial evidence above, the analysis of Turner’s ineffective assistance claim that follows is relatively succinct.
As outlined earlier, with respect to Turner’s mental illness, Dr. Stinson and Dr. Barnard each testified at trial regarding Turner’s mental state at the time of the murders, and Dr. Miller testified twice,once at trial and once during the penalty phase. As detailed above, each of these expert witnesses specifically addressed the severity of Turner’s emotional state leading up to and during the murders. Dr. Miller, in fact, testified during the penalty phase that Turner’s mental state met the standard for “extreme mental or emotional disturbance” and substantial impairment of the capacity to appreciate the criminality of conduct. See Fla. Stat. § 921.141(6)(b), (f) (1983). The State called no witnesses to rebut Dr. Miller’s testimony during the penalty phase. While the record does not reflect the jury’s specific findings on these two mental miti *1278 gation factors, it is clear in the record that the trial judge specifically rejected each of them. 25
With respect to Turner’s service in the Armed Forces during Vietnam, there likewise was substantial evidence presented during both the guilt and penalty phases of the trial. During the guilt phase, Dr. Stin-son, Dr. Miller, and Dr. Barnard each testified that Turner had been in the Air Force in Vietnam and had engaged in varying degrees of combat situations, including seeing other soldiers wounded or killed. Furthermore, during the penalty phase, a photograph of Turner in the Air Force, his enlistment papers, a marksmanship medal, and his honorable discharge all were admitted into evidence. Turner’s father also testified that Turner had served in Vietnam and discussed the military awards that Turner had earned. Given this abundance of evidence, it also is important to note that the trial court did not discount Turner’s Vietnam service due to a lack of evidence. Rather, the trial court determined that Turner’s Vietnam service was almost twenty years prior to the murders and too remote in time to act as persuasive mitigating evidence: “The Court finds this factor to exist, but must consider the fact that the defendant was discharged in 1968.” Thus, the additional information in the Appendix about Turner’s service in Vietnam is largely cumulative.
As detailed earlier, Turner’s trial counsel also presented to the jury considerable evidence of Turner’s exemplary citizenship. Turner’s coworker, Mark Ballard, testified about Turner’s daring rescue of a woman who was abducted and raped while Turner was working for the Florida DOT. In connection with testimony regarding Turner’s heroism, letters of commendation from the Secretary of the Florida DOT and a member of the Florida House of Representatives were admitted into evidence, along with newspaper clippings and a heroism medal awarded by the Florida DOT. Ballard’s affidavit, filed in the Appendix, does allege that he could have testified to more heroic acts by Turner if someone only had asked him. Such allegations, however, are exactly the type of
ex post
musings cautioned against in
Waters v. Thomas,
Similarly, Turner argues that the affidavits of a jail counselor and jail nurse contained in his Appendix are indicia of readily available testimony regarding his exemplary prison conduct and potential for rehabilitation. While jail personnel did not testify on Turner’s behalf at trial, there was testimony during the penalty phase from Turner’s brother, Gregory, stating that Turner continued his devoted religious practices while incarcerated and that Turner was “a positive influence on him[self| and other inmates in his block.” Thus, the jury and trial court were not unaware of Turner’s prison conduct.
*1279 Furthermore, in ultimately determining Turner’s sentence, the trial judge had the additional benefit of three memoranda written and filed by Turner’s trial counsel. As detailed at length earlier, trial counsel’s memoranda specifically addressed Turner’s “extreme mental or emotional disturbance,” and placed Turner’s mental state in the context of his marital discord and family problems. Trial counsel’s memo-randa also recited extensive facts regarding (1) Turner’s exemplary employment history, (2) his family upbringing and its influence on Turner’s life and behavior, (3) Turner’s service in Vietnam, focusing especially on Turner’s personal choice to enlist in the Air Force, and (4) Turner’s meritorious conduct as a concerned citizen. Attached to one of the memoranda were a number of exhibits containing further mitigating evidence, including the full reports of all three psychiatrists — both State and defense experts — who testified at trial. Thus, Turner’s trial counsel made the trial judge aware of most, if not all, of the forms of mitigating evidence contained in Turner’s Appendix — not only during the trial evidence but also in supplemental memoranda during sentencing.
In sum, after careful comparison of the trial record and the exhibits in Turner’s Appendix, we conclude that the district court correctly found that the vast majority of the evidence contained in the Appendix to Turner’s § 2254 petition is cumulative to the evidence that was presented at trial and considered by the jury and state trial court at sentencing.
Second, the mere fact that Turner has submitted seventy-eight exhibits of additional information does not prove ineffective assistance of counsel. “In reviewing counsel’s performance, a court must avoid using the distorting effects of hindsight and must evaluate the reasonableness of counsel’s performance from counsel’s perspective at the time.”
Chandler,
Because Turner has not shown that his counsel’s “performance was deficient,” we need not reach the prejudice prong of
Strickland.
IV. RING CLAIM
Based on
Ring v. Arizona,
Under Florida’s capital sentencing structure, a jury renders an advisory verdict to the trial judge recommending life in prison or death, and subsequently the trial judge makes findings and determines the actual sentence. The Florida Supreme Court has stated that a “trial judge ... is not bound by the jury’s recommendation, and is given final authority to determine the appropriate sentence.”
Engle v. State,
A. Procedural Bar
In his state court proceedings, Turner never claimed that Florida’s capital sentencing structure violated his Sixth Amendment right to a trial by jury. Thus, Turner is procedurally barred from bringing a Sixth Amendment claim under
Ring
in this § 2254 proceeding. “A state habe-as corpus petitioner who fails to raise his federal claims properly in state court is procedurally barred from pursuing the same claim in federal court absent a showing of cause for and actual prejudice from the default.”
Bailey v. Nagle,
Procedural default arises when “the petitioner simply never raised a claim in state court, and it is obvious that the unexhausted claim would now be procedurally barred due to a state-law procedural default.”
Bailey,
The record clearly shows that Turner never raised a Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial claim in the Florida courts. None of Turner’s twelve claims on direct appeal, sixteen claims in the Rule 3.850 appeal, and three claims in his state habe-as petition mentions, much less substantively addresses, a violation of Turner’s Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial. While Turner drew the attention of the Florida appellate courts to myriad issues, including the necessity of special verdict forms at the guilt and penalty phases of trial, Turner did not argue that his Sixth Amendment rights were violated or that the Florida Supreme Court should depart from
Hildwin v. Florida,
Turner’s “[f]ailure to raise [this] claim[ ] until now means that [he] deprived the state courts of ‘the first opportunity to hear the claim[ ] sought to be vindicated in a federal habeas proceeding.’”
Bailey,
A habeas petitioner, such as Turner, however, may escape the procedural default doctrine either through showing “cause for the default and prejudice” or establishing a “fundamental miscarriage of justice.”
Bailey,
“If a defendant perceives a constitution-' al claim and believes it may find favor in the federal courts, he may not bypass the state courts simply because he thinks they will be unsympathetic to the claim. Even a state court that has previously rejected a constitutional argument may decide, upon reflection, that the contention is valid.”
Engle v. Isaac,
Furthermore, to the extent that Turner argues that he cannot be held to have forfeited his claim because settled law pre-
Ring
did not provide a legal basis for the claim,
see e.g., Barclay,
Consequently, Turner has not shown the requisite cause to excuse his procedural default. Furthermore, Turner has not established a “fundamental miscarriage of justice” as this exception occurs only in an extraordinary case, where a constitutional violation has resulted in the conviction of someone who is actually innocent and therefore is not “eligible for the death penalty.”
Sawyer v. Whitley,
B. Teague’s Non-Retroactivity Standard
Alternatively, if Turner is not procedurally barred from bringing a
Ring
claim,
Ring
does not apply retroactively to Turner’s § 2254 petition in any event. In
Teague v. Lane,
the United States Supreme Court held that there is no retroactive application in a habeas proceeding of any new constitutional rule of criminal procedure that had not been announced at the time the defendant’s conviction became final, with two narrow exceptions.
28
Whether the
Teague
doctrine bars Turner’s
Ring
claim is a matter of first impression in this Circuit. Two state supreme courts have applied the basic
Teague
framework in their own case law and have determined that
Ring
does not apply retroactively.
State v. Towery,
In a similar vein, and more importantly, this Circuit has held that
Apprendi,
on which
Ring
is based, announced a new rule of criminal procedure and does not apply retroactively on collateral review.
McCoy,
*1284 1. New Rule of Criminal Procedure
According to
Teague,
“a case announces a new rule when it breaks new ground or imposes a new obligation on the States or the Federal Government [or] ... if the result was not
dictated
by precedent existing at the time the defendant’s conviction became final.”
Just as
Apprendi
“constitutes a procedural rule because it dictates what fact-finding procedure must be employed,”
United States v. Sanders,
Our conclusion that
Ring
announces a procedural rule is bolstered by Ring’s status as an extension of
Apprendi.
We agree with other courts who have concluded that because
Apprendi
was a procedural rule, it axiomatically follows that
Ring
is also a procedural rule. As the Arizona Supreme Court aptly has stated: “Logic dictates that if
Apprendi
announced a procedural rule, then, by extension,
Ring ...
did also.”
Towery,
Further,
Ring
breaks new ground because it expressly overruled, jn part,
Walton v. Arizona,
2. Exceptions to Teague’s Non-Retro-activity Standard
The first type of rules excepted from Teague’s non-retroactivity requirement is that which places “certain kinds of primary, private individual conduct beyond the power of the criminal law-making authority.”
Teague,
The second type of rules excepted from Teague’s non-retroactivity requirement is that which “requires the observance of those procedures that are implicit in the concept of ordered liberty.”
Teague,
To fall under this second
Teague
exception, a new rule “must meet two requirements: Infringement of the rule must seriously diminish the likelihood of obtaining an accurate conviction, and the rule must alter our understanding of the
bedrock procedural elements
essential to the fairness of a proceeding.”
Tyler v. Cain,
We conclude that
Ring,
like
Apprendi,
“is not sufficiently fundamental to fall within Teague’s second exception.”
McCoy,
Accordingly, the new constitutional rule announced by the United States Supreme Court in Ring does not fall within either exception to Teague’s non-retroactivity standard. Therefore, Ring, like Appren-di, does not apply retroactively on collateral review in federal court in Turner’s case because his convictions and sentences became final before the Supreme Court announced Ring. Thus, Turner cannot collaterally challenge his convictions and sentences on the basis of a claimed Ring error. 35
V. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the district court’s denial of Turner’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Irene Hall also went by the nickname "Faye” and was referred to at trial by both names interchangeably. For purposes of clarity, we will refer to her as Irene and will alter any quotations accordingly. In addition, although the record indicates that both Anita and Anetra moved with their mother, it is clear from the record that Anita was not present at the apartment the morning of the murders.
. At the time of these incidents, Turner was subject to a court restraining order forbidding him to have contact .with either his wife or his daughters. The restraining order stemmed from Turner’s prior violent conduct toward Shirley, including two prior incidents of battery.
. Apparently, there was no phone inside the apartment. The telephone booth was located on a busy street comer, only a few houses away from the apartment building.
. Turner was represented at trial by two attorneys, Henry Coxe, III, and Daniel Smith. We refer to them collectively throughout this opinion as "trial counsel.”
. In his direct appeal to the Florida Supreme Court, Turner challenged the admissibility of the 911 tape.
Turner v. State,
. This testimony is in conflict with that of Officer Venosh.
. Florida Statute § 394.467, known as the Baker Act, allows a person to be placed involuntarily in a treatment facility if clear and convincing evidence indicates that the person is mentally ill, and, inter alia, there is a substantial likelihood that, based on recent behavior, the person will inflict serious bodily harm on himself or another person. Fla. Stat. § 394.467(l)(a).
. See supra note 7 regarding the Baker Act.
. Dr. Miller also testified that Turner's father did not approve of the "way in which his son was handling the problem with his wife” and told his son that “he was a wimp in the way he was behaving with Shirley.” Turner apparently also sought help from his brother-in-law "who said he wasn't about to take himself down to the ghetto to help him with his problem.”
. One juror was a seaman aboard an aircraft carrier in the United States Navy. He was scheduled to ship out on one of those dates, and the Navy was unwilling to reschedule his departure. Furthermore, the State was unwilling to stipulate to seating an alternate juror or to using only eleven jurors and beginning the penalty phase as originally scheduled on September 6, 1985.
. The trial court admitted eleven separate defense exhibits during the penalty phase of Turner's trial: (1) a family photo; (2) a photo of Turner in the Air Force; (3) Turner’s school records; (4) Turner's DOT personnel file; (5) a letter from Florida DOT Secretary Paul Pappas commending Turner’s rescue of a kidnapped rape victim; (6) a newspaper article discussing Turner's rescue of a kidnapped rape victim; (7) a letter from State Representative Bankhead to Secretary Pappas regarding Turner's rescue efforts; (8) a Florida DOT medal; (9) Turner's Air Force enlistment papers; (10) Turner's marksmanship medal from the Armed Forces; and (11) Turner’s honorable discharge.
. Frank Lee had testified earlier that Paul N. Pappas was then Secretary of the DOT.
. These arguments are essentially contained in the defense’s third memorandum written in aid of sentencing.
. A month later at sentencing, the defense still was unable to obtain certain records of Turner's military service from the federal government. Nonetheless, the trial court determined that it had given "as much additional time as [it] thought possible” to obtain the records and that the court would "not accept [the absence of the files] as a legal reason for not imposing sentence” in the case.
. The twelve issues on. direct appeal were whether (1) the court abused its discretion in excluding Baker Act evidence; (2) the state failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Turner was sane at the time of the crime; (3) there was insufficient evidence of premeditation; (4) the court erred in instructing the jury on felony-murder; (5) the court improperly refused Turner's requested instruction on age and duress as mitigating factors; (6) the court improperly rejected statutory and non-statutoiy mitigating factors; (7) the court improperly doubled the aggravating factors that the murder was heinous, atrocious and cruel, and cold, calculated and premeditated; (8) the court gave undue weight to the jury’s recommended death sentence; (9) Turner was entitled to a new trial because of his claimed involuntary absence from voir dire; (10) Turner was involuntarily absent from the jury charge conference in chambers; (11) the court abused its discretion in allowing the 911 tape into evidence; and (12) the trial judge erred in his findings regarding the aggravating factors justifying the imposition of the death penalty for Joyce’s murder.
Turner v. State,
. Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.850 provides the guidelines under which a convicted criminal defendant in Florida may move to vacate, set aside, or correct his sentence. See Fla. R.Crim. P. 3.850.
. Turner's fourteen other claims in his Rule 3.850 motion were that: (1) the trial court applied the Florida statutory scheme for the weighing of aggravating and mitigating circumstances in an arbitrary and capricious manner; (2) the Florida sentencing scheme placed upon Turner the burden of proving that death was not the appropriate sentence; (3) trial counsel was ineffective at the guilt phase; (4) trial counsel failed to challenge effectively the application of aggravating fac
*1271
tors; (5) trial counsel failed to object to improper prosecutorial argument relative to nonstatutory aggravating factors; (6) trial counsel failed to argue that giving Turner the burden of proving that life was the appropriate sentence violated his right to a reliable sentencing determination; (7) trial counsel failed to object to victim-impact evidence in violation of
Booth v. Maryland,
. The Florida Supreme Court stated;
In claims 2 and 12, Turner alleges that trial counsel was ineffective in that he failed to investigate and present mitigating circumstances, he failed to argue for a finding of nonstatutory mitigation, and he failed to inform the jurors in closing argument that they could consider mitigating evidence during the guilt phase. In support of his claims that counsel was ill-prepared to present mitigation evidence, Turner points to his motion for continuance, which was denied just prior to sentencing. The trial court found no merit to these claims and we agree.
Turner,
. This standard applies because Turner’s petition was filed prior to the effective date of AEDPA. We note that post-AEDPA, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2) applies and provides:
If the applicant has failed to develop the factual basis of a claim in State court proceedings, the court shall not hold an evi-dentiary hearing on the claim unless the applicant shows that—
(A) the claim relies on—
(i) a new rule of constitutional law, made retroactive to cases on collateral review by the Supreme Court, that was previously unavailable; or
(ii) a factual predicate that could not have been previously discovered through the exercise of due diligence; and
(B) the facts underlying the claim would be sufficient to establish by clear and convincing evidence that but for constitutional error, no reasonable factfinder would have found the applicant guilty of the underlying offense.
28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(2).
. Where facts have been in dispute, Turner has, in fact, received an evidentiary hearing. During direct appeal, the Florida Supreme Court relinquished jurisdiction to the state trial court for an evidentiary hearing on Turner’s absence from certain portions of his jury trial.
See Turner,
. Turner additionally identifies his mental retardation as a fifth area in which his counsel should have investigated and presented mitigating evidence. To the extent that Turner argues that evidence of mental retardation would preclude his execution under
Atkins v. Virginia,
. To the extent Turner argues that trial counsel was ineffective in failing to secure more time to locate this additional mitigating evidence, we conclude that trial counsel was not ineffective. First, trial counsel moved for a continuance prior to the sentencing hearing before the jury. We cannot fault trial counsel for attempting to secure more time, only to be denied by the trial court. Second, as recounted earlier, trial counsel actually was able to submit further mitigating evidence and arguments to the trial court more than a month *1277 after the initial sentencing hearing in front of the jury on August 23, 1985, but before the trial court sentenced Turner on November 1, 1985. Thus, trial counsel, in effect, obtained additional time to gather mitigating evidence and to submit it to the trial court.
. In reviewing the evidence available to the jury and trial judge prior to sentencing, we consider dll of the evidence available, not just the evidence Turner’s counsel specifically introduced. Also, the jury instructions told the jury to consider the evidence it had heard, not just that the defense had presented. We recognize that some of the mitigating evidence regarding Turner's mental state and Vietnam experience discussed herein came from the State’s psychiatric expert testimony. Nevertheless, not to consider such evidence in the context of this ineffective assistance claim would have the effect of requiring significant repetition of testimony at trial. Furthermore, to the extent we rely on the psychiatric expert testimony as mitigating evidence, we note that Turner’s trial counsel attached all three psychiatrists' reports, including the State's psychiatric expert’s reports, to his memorandum in aid of sentencing filed on October 3, 1985, prior to the final sentencing hearing on November 1, 1985.
. Although Turner's Appendix focuses on these four mitigating factors, the Appendix also contains information regarding Turner’s deeply-held religious convictions, his alleged drug and alcohol problems that began in Vietnam, his remorse for his actions, his difficult childhood and his parents’ history of stress-related physical problems. Two of these areas, however, were addressed during trial (Turner's religious convictions and alcoholism in Vietnam). The other areas specifically were rebutted by other trial testimony (Turner informing Dr. Stinson that he “was without remorse” and would commit the murders again and that "his mother and father were everything parents should be”). Thus, to the extent that Turner argues that his trial counsel was ineffective in his treatment of these potentially mitigating matters, we conclude that the evidence is either cumulative or specifically rebutted by other trial testimony, and that Turner’s trial counsel was not ineffective in this regard.
. The trial judge specifically stated that "[t]he assertion that the defendant was under the influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance is specifically rejected as a mitigating circumstance,” and that "the Court specifically reject[ed] the contention that the capacity of the defendant to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of law was substantially impaired.”
. In addressing this same issue, the Florida Supreme Court has determined that
Ring
did not reach the constitutional validity of Florida’s capital sentencing structure.
King v. Moore,
. Indeed, at oral argument before this Court, Turner’s counsel effectively conceded, as he must, that a .Ring-like claim was not raised in the Florida court proceedings.
. In contrast, new rules of
substantive
criminal law are applied retroactively.
Bousley v. United States,
. While essentially utilizing the
Teague
framework, both the Arizona and Nevada Supreme Courts made it abundantly clear that, in their view, the United States Supreme Court
strictly
applies
Teague
in practice, and that those courts were not adopting
Teague
wholesale but adopting a less strict application of
Teague. Towery,
. This appeal is Turner’s first § 2254 petition filed in 1993 prior to AEDPA. The Tenth Circuit has concluded that
Ring
does not apply retroactively, but in the context of successive habeas petitions governed by AEDPA.
See Cannon v. Mullin,
. The Supreme Court specifically described
Apprendi,
on which
Ring
is based, as a procedural decision: “The substantive basis for New Jersey’s enhancement is thus not at issue; the adequacy of New Jersey’s
procedure
is.”
Apprendi,
. In
Walton,
the Supreme Court rejected defendant Walton's argument that the Sixth Amendment demands that a jury, rather than a judge, find the presence of aggravating circumstances and upheld Arizona’s capital sentencing statute, the same statute at issue in
Ring. Walton,
.
See also United States v. Cotton,
. Because we conclude that Ring does not apply retroactively to Turner's case, we today expressly do not reach the issue of whether Florida’s capital sentencing structure, which includes a jury's advisory verdict followed by sentencing by the trial judge, would still pass constitutional muster under Ring.
.As Justice O’Connor observed in
Ring,
current death row inmates “having completed their direct appeals ... will be barred from taking advantage of
[Ring]
on federal collateral review.”
Ring,
