Lead Opinion
Opinion by Judges PREGERSON and TASHIMA; Dissent by Judge PREGERSON.
OPINION
PREGERSON, Circuit Judge, authored Sections I, II, and III-B, with which Judges TASHIMA and BERZON concur. TASHIMA, Circuit Judge, authored Section III-A, with which Judge BERZON concurs, and from which Judge PREGERSON dissents.
John Visciotti (“Visciotti”), a California state prisoner, was convicted of first de
I.
The following events, as described by the California Supreme Court, led to Vis-ciotti’s prosecution and conviction.
[Visciotti] and Brian Hefner, both of whom had been employed as burglar alarm salesmen by Global Wholesalers in Garden Grove [California], and who shared a motel room, were fired by their employer on November 8, 1982. Because their final paychecks were insufficient to cover future rent, they devised a plan to rob fellow employees who were also to be paid on that date. The pair waited in the company parking lot until another group of employees, among whom were [Timothy] Dykstra and [Michael] Wolbert, returned from their shifts. They invited Dykstra and Wol-bert to join them at a party which, they claimed, was to be held at the home of friends in the Anaheim Hills area.
Dykstra and Wolbert agreed to go to the party. They did not know [Visciotti] and Hefner well, however, and were cautious. They insisted on driving in Wol-bert’s car. They also removed most of their cash from their wallets and hid it behind the dashboard of their car. After leaving [Visciotti’s] car at an apartment complex, the four drove to a remote area on Santiago Canyon Road where [Visciotti] asked Wolbert to stop so that defendant could relieve himself. It was then between 7 and 9 p.m.
All four men left the car, Dykstra getting out first to permit [Visciotti] to leave. After the other three men left the car, Wolbert saw a gun in [Viseiot-ti’s] waistband. Wolbert then left the car and when he next looked at [Visciot-ti] he saw that [Visciotti] and Dykstra were standing face-to-face about two feet apart, with [Visciotti] holding the gun pointed at Dykstra. [Visciotti] demanded the victims’ wallets. Wolbert told [Visciotti] where the money was hidden. Dykstra and Wolbert then stayed on an embankment, several feet apart, while Hefner searched for the money.
[Visciotti] moved to stand by Wolbert, who asked [Visciotti] to let them go, told him to take the car and the money, and assured him that he would not identify him. When Hefner left the car, [Visciot-ti] moved back toward Dykstra who was sitting down. [Visciotti] then raised the gun in one hand and shot Dykstra from a distance of about three or four feet....
After [Visciotti] shot Dykstra, Wol-bert stood up and stepped back. [Vis-ciotti] approached Wolbert, who was backing up, raised the gun in both hands, and shot Wolbert three times....
In spite of his life-threatening wounds, Wolbert did not lose consciousness. He heard defendant and Hefner get into the car and drive back down the road. He was later able to attract the attention of passersby who summoned aid. He identified his assailants as fellow employees at Global Wholesalers. Dykstra was*1102 dead when paramedics arrived. Wol-bert was transported to the hospital where he underwent surgery. On the following morning, he identified both defendant and Hefner in a photographic lineup, identifying [Visciotti] as the person who had shot him and Dykstra.
[Visciotti] and Hefner were arrested as they left their motel room about 9 a.m. on the morning after the robbery and murder. The murder weapon, a .22 caliber single action revolver which still held six expended shell cases in the cylinder, was found hidden in a space behind the bathroom sink. [Visciotti] confessed his involvement and, at the request of the investigating officers, participated in a videotaped reenactment of those events that had taken place in Santiago Canyon.
Analysis of a sample of [Visciotti’s] blood, taken at approximately noon on November 9, 1982, revealed no alcohol, amphetamines, opiates, barbiturates, or phencyclidine (POP). Cocaine and ben-zoylecgonine, a metabolite of cocaine, were present, however.
People v. Visciotti,
Roger Agajanian (“Agajanian”) was retained by Visciotti’s father to represent Visciotti during pretrial proceedings, through trial, and on appeal. Agajanian was admitted to the California bar in July 1973. In re Visciotti,
Trial Proceedings
Visciotti was tried by a jury in July 1983 in the Superior Court of the State of California, County of Orange. During the guilt phase of Visciotti’s trial, the surviving victim, Michael Wolbert, testified on behalf of the prosecution. The prosecution additionally introduced as evidence Visciotti’s videotaped confession and reenactment.
Dr. Louis Broussard (“Dr.Broussard”) testified as a witness for the defense. Dr. Broussard testified that Visciotti “had minimal brain injury of a type associated with impulse disorders and specific learning disorders.” Visciotti,
Visciotti testified on his own behalf. During Agajanian’s direct examination, Visciotti described the night of the crimes consistently with the videotaped confession and reenactment. Agajanian also elicited information from Visciotti about his prior juvenile and misdemeanor offenses. Vis-ciotti also admitted that he had been convicted of assault with a deadly weapon, and described the facts underlying this felony conviction. Visciotti testified that the assault occurred after two men broke down
The prosecution contradicted Visciotti’s description of the circumstances of the assault through its cross-examination of Vis-ciotti and through the testimony of a police officer the prosecution called as a rebuttal witness. The prosecution elicited testimony from Visciotti and the police officer that Visciotti had broken into Scofield’s room and stabbed both Scofield and Kathy Cu-sack (“Cusack”), a pregnant woman who was in Scofield’s bed at the time.
The jury found Visciotti guilty of murder, attempted murder, and armed robbery, with a special circumstance finding that the murder was committed during the commission of a robbery.
During the penalty phase of Visciotti’s trial, Scofield and Cusack
On automatic appeal, the California Supreme Court affirmed Visciotti’s conviction, with one justice dissenting. People v. Visciotti,
Habeas Proceedings
Visciotti filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the California Supreme Court. The California Supreme Court appointed a referee
Visciotti, with the assistance of court-appointed counsel, filed a federal habeas petition on June 23, 1998. Judge Real of the United States District Court for the
The state timely appealed Judge Real’s decision to grant habeas relief on Visciot-ti’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim as to Visciotti’s sentence. Visciotti cross-appealed Judge Real’s decision to deny habeas relief on Visciotti’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim as to Visciotti’s conviction. Visciotti does not appeal Judge Real’s dismissal of Visciotti’s other claims.
II. Standard of Review
A federal court may grant a writ of habeas corpus to a state prisoner only if the state court’s rulings “resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States” or were “based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented” in the state courts.
III. Discussion
A. Agajanian’s Performance During the Guilt Phase
Unlike its lengthy discussion concerning Agajanian’s performance at the penalty phase of the trial, the California Supreme Court denied Visciotti’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel at the guilt phase of his trial without providing a reasoned explanation. Instead, the state court simply stated that by issuing an order to show cause that was limited to counsel’s penalty phase performance, it had “implicitly concluded” that the other claims failed to “state a prima facie case.” In re Visciotti,
On habeas review, when there is no reasoned state court decision to review, we must conduct “an independent review of the record ... to determine whether the state court clearly erred in its application of controlling federal law.” Delgado v. Lewis,
To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a petitioner must show that: (1) “counsel’s performance was deficient;” and (2) “the deficient performance prejudiced the defense.” Strickland v. Washington,
To demonstrate prejudice, a defendant must show that there is a “reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Strickland,
The strength of the prosecution’s evidence against Visciotti for first degree murder under the felony murder rule and for attempted murder made it highly unlikely that even a highly competent performance by Agajanian could have altered the jury’s verdict. To convict Visciotti under the felony murder rule, the jurors were not required to find malice or premeditation; the “only criminal intent required [was] the specific intent to commit the [robbery].” People v. Dillon,
The prosecution adduced the testimony of the surviving victim, Wolbert, who knew Visciotti from his workplace and unambiguously identified him as the man who had robbed and shot Dykstra and Wolbert, killing Dykstra. The prosecution also introduced two videotapes in which Visciotti confessed to his plan and intent to rob the men and his knowing and intentional shooting of them during the course of that robbery. One of the videotapes, referred to by the state court as a “re-enactment,” see In re Visciotti,
There was only minimal evidence supporting a defense that Visciotti lacked the ability to form the requisite intent for the underlying robbery charge due to his drug use. On the other hand, the evidence against such a claim, including Wolbert’s testimony about Visciotti’s demeanor at the time of the crime and Visciotti’s own videotaped recollection of the details of his and Hefner’s plans to rob and their subsequent robbery of Wolbert and Dykstra, was substantial and convincing. In light of this strong inculpatory evidence and the
Visciotti contends, however, that Agajanian’s flawed performance at the guilt phase of the trial requires the application of the per se prejudice rule. In Sixth Amendment right to counsel cases, the Supreme Court has presumed prejudice where there are “circumstances that are so likely to prejudice the accused that the cost of litigating their effect in a particular case is unjustified.” United States v. Cronic,
As noted above, Agajanian’s overall performance at the guilt phase of the trial may well have been deficient. His shortcomings included his insufficient investigation and preparation for trial and the limited range of his defense arguments. The foregoing notwithstanding, the record demonstrates at least some efforts by Aga-janian to advocate Visciotti’s case during the guilt phase. Agajanian put on a defense mental health expert, Dr. Louis Broussard, made objections, and cross-examined the prosecution’s witnesses. There is also nothing in the record to indicate that Agajanian had a conflict of interest, sympathized with the prosecution, was hostile to his client, or wanted him to be convicted. Under these circumstances, we cannot conclude that Agajanian’s overall performance at the guilt phase “entirely failed to subject the prosecution’s case to meaningful adversarial testing,” Cronic,
The record also does not support the contention that Agajanian abandoned Vis-ciotti “at a critical stage of his trial” by conceding in his closing argument that there was no reasonable doubt that Vis-ciotti was guilty of first degree murder. In United States v. Swanson,
Although a few of Agajanian’s statements can be interpreted as a concession of Visciotti’s guilt as to the felony murder portion of the charges,
Agajanian also argued that the murder was not premeditated and that Visciotti lacked the specific intent to kill. He argued that the murder weapon did not belong to Visciotti; that Visciotti had testified to being “scared,” “paranoid,” and “spaced out” at the time of the shootings; and that the evidence of planning, including efforts to fool the victims about the defendants’ place of residence, suggested that there was no intent to kill. Agajanian also argued that Visciotti was not a coldblooded killer by emphasizing the role that Visciotti’s drug use probably played in the robbery and shootings; noting the fact that Visciotti claimed he was “loaded,” that cocaine was found in his blood, and that there is a close link between crime and drug abuse; contending that Visciotti had shot Wolbert from a greater distance than Wolbert testified to; and pointing out that Visciotti had gotten sick and vomited after the shootings.
One can question Agajanian’s closing argument strategy of arguing that the crime was not premeditated and that Visciotti was not a cold-blooded murderer, since the jury could convict Visciotti of first degree murder under the felony murder rule without finding premeditation or a specific intent to kill. It is important to keep in mind, however, the context in which Agaja-nian was lawyering. This was a death penalty case in which the prosecution was making a strong effort to portray the murder and attempted murder as cold-blooded, pre-meditated, and execution-like, and virtually no effective defense to the felony murder charge was available for defense counsel to argue. In that context, the focus of Agajanian’s closing argument on disproving premeditation and the coldblooded nature of the murder cannot fairly be characterized as an abandonment of the client, as a jury might be less likely to impose the death penalty on someone convicted of felony murder, as opposed to someone who set out to commit a premeditated murder.
Accordingly, we conclude that the California Supreme Court’s decision that Visciotti failed to make a prima facie case of ineffective assistance of counsel at the guilt phase of the trial was not “objectively unreasonable.” Because the record before us does not support a finding of clear error, we conclude that the state court reasonably applied clearly established federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States; therefore, we affirm the district court’s denial of Visciotti’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel at the guilt phase of the trial.
B. Agajanian’s Performance During the Penalty Phase
Strickland also governs Visciotti’s claim that he received ineffective assistance of counsel during the penalty phase. Accordingly, to prevail on his penalty phase ineffective assistance of counsel claim, Visciotti must show that Agajanian’s performance was deficient and that his deficient performance prejudiced Visciot-ti’s defense. Strickland,
The California Supreme Court’s decision was “contrary to” Supreme Court law because it mischaracterized Strickland’s prejudice standard. Instead of evaluating whether there was a reasonable probability that, absent Agajanian’s deficient performance, the result of the proceedings would have been different, the California Supreme Court evaluated whether a more favorable result was probable absent Agajanian’s deficient perfor-
If a state court were to reject a prisoner’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel on the grounds that the prisoner had not established by a preponderance of the evidence that the result of his criminal proceeding would have been different, that decision would be “diametrically different,” “opposite in character or nature,” and “mutually opposed” to [the Supreme Court’s] clearly established precedent because [the Court] held in Strickland that the prisoner need only demonstrate a “reasonable probability that ... the result of the proceeding would have been different.”
Williams,
1. Agajanian’s preparation for and presentation during the penalty phase was deficient.
The California Supreme Court assumed that Agajanian’s preparation for and presentation at the penalty phase was deficient because Agajanian:
(1) failed to investigate and discover mitigating evidence as a result of his ignorance of the types of evidence a jury might consider mitigating; (2) failed to present readily available evidence that would have revealed to the jury the extent to which petitioner was subjected to psychological and physical abuse as a child, the impact the dysfunctional and peripatetic family life had on petitioner’s development, and the correlation between these events and petitioner’s resort to drugs; (3) failed to prepare, which left him unaware of the scope of the aggravating evidence to be introduced; and (4) delivered an unfocused closing argument, during which he undercut his client’s own case by telling the jury that the evidence of petitioner’s*1110 mental and emotional problems was not mitigating.
In re Visciotti,
a. Agajanian failed to investigate and discover mitigating evidence about Visciotti.
It is clearly established Supreme Court law that the failure to conduct a reasonable investigation constitutes deficient performance. “[CJounsel has a duty to make reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations unnecessary.” Strickland,
Agajanian’s performance during the penalty phase was deficient because he conducted essentially no investigation in search of potentially mitigating evidence about Visciotti. Agajanian did not conduct “any formal one-on-one interviews of witnesses familiar with Visciotti’s background.” Dist. Ct. at 8. Agajanian did not retrieve or review “any records having to do with John Visciotti’s background, medical history, school history, history of drug use, juvenile probation, prior convictions, prior incarcerations, or any other material relevant to Visciotti’s history.” In re Visciotti,
Agajanian’s performance during the penalty phase was also deficient because he inadequately developed and presented expert testimony regarding Visciotti’s mental health. Two psychiatrists, Dr. Seawright Anderson (“Dr. Anderson”) and Dr. Kaushal Sharma (“Dr. Sharma”) were appointed by the court to evaluate Visciot-ti’s competence to stand trial and sanity at the time of the offenses, but Agajanian provided neither Dr. Sharma nor Dr. Anderson with the information they needed to provide a competent evaluation. Dist. Ct. at 10-12; In re Visciotti,
Although Agajanian did have a mental health expert, Dr. Broussard, testify for the defense during the guilt phase, he was retained three days before he testified and was unprepared to provide a reliable conclusion about Visciotti’s mental state at the time of the offenses. At their only meeting regarding this case, which lasted less than one hour, Agajanian and Dr. Brous-sard “discuss[ed] diminished capacity,” but Agajanian did not give Dr. Broussard any
In addition, Agajanian did not heed recommendations from both Dr. Anderson and Dr. Broussard that Agajanian should arrange for additional psychological testing and evaluation of Visciotti. In his report, Dr. Anderson wrote that Visciotti had repeatedly suffered head injuries, including one that resulted in a brief coma, and had been placed on anti-psychotic medications. Dr. Anderson concluded that Visciotti might have organic brain damage, and recommended that additional tests be performed to “rule out the possibility of organic brain disorder” and to “obtain more information about petitioner’s basic personality structure.” Id. Dr. Broussard also encouraged Agajanian to retain a licensed clinical social worker to conduct an extensive evaluation of Visciotti’s social history. In re Visciotti,
b. Agajanian failed to present readily available mitigating evidence about Visciotti’s background.
As a result of his failure to investigate Visciotti’s background, Agajanian did not uncover or present evidence during the penalty phase that was later described at Visciotti’s state habeas proceeding as “overwhelming mitigating circumstances” in “an absolutely horrendous family history.” In re Visciotti,
Visciotti’s parents’ relationship was “extremely volatile, hostile, and mutually abusive, both physically and verbally.” Id. at 341,
- All of the children were “blamed for the family’s difficulties, and some were beaten with a belt and slapped.” Id. Visciotti’s parents were particularly relentless in their abuse of Visciotti. Id. at 342,
Visciotti’s education suffered as a result of his family situation. “Economic problems and the number of children caused the family to move often which had a profound effect on the children. [Visciotti] left kindergarten after nine days and was not re-enrolled in school for the first grade for two years.” Id. Visciotti’s family moved at least twenty times when Visciotti was growing up, and the constant moves “impacted[Visciotti’s] ability to function in school and in his social world. He was always an outsider.” Id. at 343,
Visciotti’s family situation also took a toll on his self-perception. Visciotti “thought he could never do anything right and could never do anything to please his parents. He was highly self-critical and blamed himself for things for which he had no responsibility such as his parents’ difficulties.” Id. at 341,
By the time he turned eight, Visciotti used drugs to escape his family situation. Id. at 343,
Visciotti was tested for a brain abnormality while at the California Youth Authority because he did not seem to be a “typical delinquent.” Id. at 343,
Agajanian’s failure to investigate and present any of this evidence was not the product of a reasoned tactical decision. Agajanian asserted that, after reviewing Visciotti’s videotaped confession and reenactment, he concluded that he would not conduct the investigation necessary to pursue a “sympathy defense” based upon Vis-ciotti’s upbringing because he did not think that any jury could feel sympathy for Vis-ciotti. As Agajanian explained:
The bottom line is I could not imagine, no matter how terrible his childhood could have been, I could not imagine why a jury would care even a little bit about what happened to a person when he was born or what happened to a person when he was in school or whether he got to play little league or not or whether his father was physically abusive or mentally abusive to him or whether his mother was physically or mentally abusive.
Agajanian’s decision not to pursue a sympathy defense based on Visciotti’s background cannot be viewed as strategic because it was entirely unfounded. As Agajanian acknowledged, he “chose not to pursue a sympathy defense on behalf of John Visciotti individually ... without knowing what [he] might find if [he] did.” Indeed, Agajanian shielded himself from information that might prove his strategy wrong. Agajanian specifically told Dr. Broussard that he “did not want an opinion on childhood abuse in the report or for Dr. Broussard to indicate that there was any problem in the family, no matter how important information about the family was.” Id. at 340,
Moreover, Agajanian’s conclusion that information about Visciotti’s background could not mitigate Visciotti’s punishment is unreasonable. As the Supreme Court has recognized, “ ‘evidence about the defendant’s background and character is relevant because of the belief, long held by this society, that defendants who commit criminal acts that are attributable to a disadvantaged background, or to emotional and mental problems, may be less culpable than defendants who have no such excuse.’ ” Penry v. Lynaugh,
In sum, Agajanian was ineffective during the penalty phase because he did not “fulfill [his] obligation to conduct a thorough investigation of [Visciotti’s] background,” and failed to introduce the “voluminous amount of evidence that did speak in [Visciotti’s] favor.” Williams,
c. Agajanian relied on a strategy in mitigation that was factually unsupported and that portrayed Vis-ciotti in an inaccurate and unflattering light.
Instead of investigating and presenting the wealth of available mitigating evidence about Visciotti’s upbringing and history, Agajanian decided, after viewing Visciotti’s videotaped confession, that his strategy during the mitigation phase would be to evoke sympathy for the Visciotti family. Agajanian pursued this “family sympathy” mitigation strategy because “[h]e believed that, although sympathy for petitioner could not be expected, sympathy for petitioner’s parents might be” and “[h]is defense would therefore suggest that the parents were nice people whose son should not be killed.” In re Visciotti,
Agajanian’s family sympathy mitigation strategy had little factual support. At the time Agajanian decided to pursue the family sympathy strategy, Agajanian had not “conducted] formal interviews with any members of petitioner’s family,” he had done “no investigation ... to seek potentially mitigating evidence,” and he had “no information about petitioner’s background other than what appeared to him to be ‘good aspects’ of the family.” Id. at 337,
Agajanian’s family sympathy mitigation strategy was inconsistent with the little that Agajanian found out about the Visciotti family. When Agajanian decided that he would pursue a family sympathy strategy, he was aware that there was “some brutality in the family” and some “possible family discord” during Visciotti’s youth. Id. He decided not to investigate these allegations, however, because, Agaja-nian declared, he “was not interested in making [Visciotti’s] father or mother or brothers or sisters out to be monsters because they had sat through the entire trial and supported him throughout the trial.” Agajanian’s decision that it was more important to preserve the Visciotti family’s pride or dignity than it was to prevent his client from receiving the death penalty cannot be viewed as a reasonable basis to forego investigation. As the California Supreme Court “assume[d] arguen-do,” “since Agajanian apparently was put on notice of possible family discord during petitioner’s youth, his decision to present a ‘family sympathy’ defense without investigation to determine the nature of the evidence that was available was not a decision that a competent attorney representing a capital defendant would make.” Id. at 348,
As a result of his mitigation strategy, Agajanian portrayed Visciotti in an unflattering light that Agajanian knew to be inaccurate. Agajanian portrayed Visciotti as his family’s only “bad seed,” while knowing that Visciotti’s brother had been arrested for drunk driving and Visciotti’s sister had been arrested for possession of methamphetamine. Dist. Ct. at 7. Indeed, during Visciotti’s state habeas hearing, members of Visciotti’s family confirmed that, “contrary to the evidence offered at the penalty phase, [Visciotti] was not the only ‘bad seed’ in an otherwise loving family.” In re Visciotti,
The Supreme Court has instructed that “strategic choices made after less than
d. Agajanian was unprepared to respond to the prosecution’s aggravating evidence.
Agajanian’s performance during the penalty phase was also deficient because he did not investigate and was not prepared to respond to the prosecution’s case in aggravation. Five months before trial began, the prosecutor filed a notice that he intended to introduce, as evidence in aggravation, evidence related to the instant offense and Visciotti’s prior conviction for assault with a deadly weapon. Dist. Ct. at 9. Despite this notice, and “[ajlthough it was the practice of the district attorney at the time of the Visciotti trial to make the case files of prosecutors available to defense counsel ... Agajanian did not send for the police report or go through the prosecutor’s file to read it in advance of trial.” In re Visciotti,
Agajanian also failed to investigate or introduce any evidence during the penalty phase to mitigate the circumstances of the capital offense. Agajanian did not interview Wolbert, the surviving victim, or Hefner, Visciotti’s co-perpetrator, nor did he review the transcript of Hefner’s trial. Agajanian also failed to introduce — beyond that introduced at the guilt phase-mitigating evidence regarding the circumstances of the offense: that the gun used to shoot Dykstra and Wolbert belonged to Hefner, that Visciotti did not plan to shoot Wolbert or Dykstra, that Visciotti shot Dkystra only after Hefner gave Visciotti the gun and repeatedly encouraged him to shoot, and that Visciotti had injected himself with cocaine a few hours before the robbery and murder occurred. Dist. Ct. at 28. Agajanian has not offered a reasonable explanation for his failure to conduct this minimal investigation or marshal the available mitigating evidence regarding the circumstances of the capital offense.
Agajanian’s failure to investigate Vis-ciotti’s prior felony assault conviction and his failure to investigate and present mitigating evidence regarding the circumstances of the capital offense cannot be justified as strategic decisions. See, e.g., Turner,
e. Agajanian undercut Visciotti’s case during closing argument.
Agajanian “delivered an unfocussed closing argument, during which he undercut his client’s case by telling the jury that the evidence of petitioner’s mental and emotional problems was not mitigating.” In re Visciotti,
In his closing argument, Agajanian told the jury that there was no mitigating evidence related to factor (a), the circumstances of the crime, because “there’s no way to make light of any kind of murder, whether or not there’s a robbery involved.” Agajanian also told the jury that there was no mitigating evidence related to factors (g) and (j), as there was “no evidence” of “extreme duress,” apparently referring to the jury’s ability to consider whether Vis-ciotti was acting “under the substantial domination of another,” and no evidence that Visciotti was an accomplice because Visciotti was, “as the People said, the trigger man.” These three concessions were contrary to evidence that the gun used to shoot Dykstra and Wolbert belonged to Hefner, that Visciotti did not plan to shoot Wolbert or Dykstra, that Visciotti shot Dkystra only after Hefner gave Visciotti the gun and repeatedly encouraged him to shoot, and that Visciotti had injected himself with cocaine a few hours before the robbery and murder occurred. Dist. Ct. at 28.
Agajanian also discounted the effect of mitigating evidence that was submitted during the guilt and penalty phases of Visciotti’s trial. Agajanian told the jury that there was no evidence of factor (d), that “the offense was committed while the defendant was under the influence of extreme mental emotional disturbance.” Agajanian said: “with respect to emotional disturbance, there’s no evidence of that. That isn’t even a factor to be considered.” Agajanian also told the jury that they could disregard factor (h), which concerned whether Visciotti’s capacity to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct “was impaired as a result of mental disease or defect or ... intoxication” because:
when you ladies and gentlemen returned this verdict of first degree murder and found special circumstances, you indicated to all of us that you did not find diminished capacity. So if you did not find diminished capacity, how can I argue that as a factor of aggravation or mitigation? It just does not apply. It’s not there. I think when you ladies and gentlemen found that — you basically found that diminished capacity did not reduce the nature of the robbery to something less than a robbery, or the nature of the first degree murder to something less than first degree murder. So that’s not a factor of mitigation.
Dist. Ct. at 29.
Agajanian conceded the inapplicability of factors (d) and (h) despite evidence submitted at the guilt phase that
Although Agajanian did not concede outright the inapplicability of two of the mitigating factors — “age” and “sympathy” — he hardly advocated for a sentence less than death on account of those factors. Regarding Visciotti’s age, Agajanian said: “The age of the defendant. I happen to consider 26 years of age a rather young age.” Regarding sympathy, Agajanian said that it “should be an issue to consider.” As the District Court observed, however, “Mr. Agajanian did not argue that factor (k) was ‘present’ or that it ‘favored the defense.’ ... Indeed, he did not identify any evidence that would warrant sympathy for Visciotti (or his family) and, if so, why the jurors should rely on such pity or sympathy as a basis for returning a sentence other than death.” Dist. Ct. at 83.
Agajanian’s failure to investigate and present extensive mitigating evidence about Visciotti’s background was unreasonable, his decision hot to pursue a mitigation strategy based on Visciotti’s background was uninformed, and his failure to develop and present expert testimony regarding Visciotti’s mental health was unjustified. The mitigation strategy Agaja-nian did pursue, based on sympathy for Visciotti’s family, presented Visciotti in an unflattering light that Agajanian knew to be inaccurate. Agajanian was utterly unprepared to respond to the prosecution’s case.in aggravation. In his closing argument, Agajanian affirmatively conceded several mitigating factors that a reasonable juror might well have applied to the facts, while offering the jury no other reason not to impose the death penalty. In sum, Agajanian’s performance throughout the penalty phase was deficient.
2. Visciotti was prejudiced by Agajani-an’s deficient performance during the penalty phase.
In addition to showing Agajanian’s deficient performance, Visciotti must show prejudice: that there is a “reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Strickland,
We conclude that, in light of the abundant mitigating evidence that Agajanian failed to introduce, Agajanian’s inaccurate portrayal of Visciotti as the one “bad seed” in his family, Agajanian’s absolute failure to counter the prosecution’s case in aggravation, and, perhaps most importantly as to prejudice, Agajanian’s closing argument, which conceded several potential mitigating factors while providing the jurors essentially no reason not to impose the death penalty, there is a “reasonable probability
As noted, the California Supreme Court did not apply the “reasonable probability” standard, so its decision as to prejudice was contrary to clearly established Supreme Court law. Even if the California Supreme Court had correctly applied the prejudice prong of the Strickland standard, however, its conclusion that Visciotti suffered no prejudice as a result of Agajanian’s deficiencies would be objectively unreasonable, because it “failed to evaluate the totality of the available mitigation evidence — both that adduced at trial, and the evidence adduced in the habeas proceeding — in reweighing it against the evidence in aggravation.” Williams,
The state argues that the California Supreme Court’s conclusion that no prejudice resulted was objectively reasonable because the aggravating evidence was overwhelming. The record reflects, however, that the aggravating factors were not overwhelming, as the jury deliberated a full day and then requested additional guidance on the definitions of “moral justification” and “extreme duress.” Cf. Bean v. Calderon,
Accordingly, having reviewed the applicable federal precedents, we conclude that Visciotti received ineffective assistance of counsel during the penalty phase and that he was prejudiced as a result. The California Supreme Court’s conclusion that
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s decision to deny habeas relief on Visciotti’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim during the guilt phase and affirm the district court’s decision to grant habeas relief on Visciotti’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim during the penalty phase.
We remand to the district court with directions to issue the writ of habeas corpus vacating the sentence of death, and conditionally requiring the imposition of a sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole, unless the state grants Visciotti a new penalty phase trial within a reasonable period of time to be set by the district court.
AFFIRMED and REMANDED.
Notes
. We review a district court’s decision to dismiss a petition for writ of habeas corpus de novo. Miles v. Prunty,
. In December 1985, while representing Vis-ciotti on appeal, Agajanian was convicted of two counts of criminal contempt in the District of Vermont. In re Visciotti,
.Under California law, a defendant who is found guilty of first degree murder will be sentenced to death or life imprisonment without the possibility of parole if one or more "special circumstances” are found. Cal.Penal Code § 190.2. The statute includes twenty-two "special circumstances,” among them that "[t]he murder was committed while the defendant was engaged in, or was an accomplice in, the commission of, attempted commission of, or the immediate flight after committing, or attempting to commit” several felonies, including robbery. Cal.Penal Code § 190.2(17).
. Cusack was called as a rebuttal witness during the penalty phase.
. The referee was a judge of the Orange County Superior Court. See In re Visciotti,
. Visciotti v. Calderon, No. CV 97-4591 R (C.D. Cal. filed Oct. 8, 1999). The district court’s opinion will be referred to as: "Dist. Ct.”
. Visciotti's petition is governed by the standards of 28 U.S.C. § 2254 because his habeas petition was filed after the effective date of the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, the statute which enacted the current standards governing the granting of the writ of habeas corpus. See Lockhart v. Terhune,
. The dissent argues that Agajanian conceded Visciotti’s guilt of felony murder twice in his closing argument. Both statements, however, were made in the context of Agajanian’s efforts to distinguish felony murder from premeditated murder. Thus, the first statement was nothing more than counsel’s statement of the law of felony murder, rather than an admission of what the evidence showed. In his second statement, Agajanian pointed out that even if the jury were to find Visciotti guilty of first degree murder, it must still conclude that the killing was "not premeditated.”
. The dissent argues that we have inappropriately "hypothesized” a strategy on behalf of Agajanian by recognizing his efforts to distin
. We note that, while we take Swanson into account in applying Cronic, Swanson does not independently qualify as "clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States,” as required by 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), in order to serve as a ground for issuance of the writ. See Van Tran,
. See Visciotti,
. Although "clearly established law” for the purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 2254, is the "holdings, as opposed to the dicta, of th[e] Court’s decision as of the time of the relevant state court decision,” Williams,
. Among the eleven factors a jury is instructed to consider when deciding whether to impose life imprisonment or death are: (a) “[tjhe circumstances of the crime of which the defendant was convicted in the present proceeding”; ... (d) "[wjhether or not the offense was committed while the defendant was under the influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance ... (g) “[wjhether or not defendant acted under extreme duress or under the substantial domination of another person (h) "[wjhether or not at the time of the offense the capacity of the defendant to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of law was impaired as a result of mental disease or defect, or the affects of intoxication ”; (i) "[tjhe age of the defendant at the time of the offense”; (j) “[wjhether or not the defendant was an accomplice to the offense and his participation in the offense was relatively minor”; (k) "[ajny other circumstance which extenuates the gravity of the crime even though it is not a legal excuse for the crime." Cal.Penal Code § 190.3 (emphases supplied).
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The majority denies Visciotti’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel during the guilt phase on the ground that Agajanian’s performance, while arguably deficient, did not prejudice the outcome of Visciotti’s trial. I believe that Agajanian’s deficient performance during the guilt phase was per se prejudicial pursuant to the Supreme Court’s decision in United States v. Cronic,
In Cronic, the Supreme Court identified certain circumstances where counsel’s performance is “so likely to prejudice the accused that the cost of litigating their effect in a particular case is unjustified,” including where a defendant “is denied counsel at a critical stage of his trial” and where counsel “fails to subject the prosecution’s case to meaningful adversarial testing.” Id. at 658-59,
Although Agajanian delivered an unorganized and at times incoherent closing argument, his concession that Visciotti committed first degree murder is unmistakable. Agajanian told the jury that Vis-ciotti was guilty of first degree murder if they found that “an implied malice killing of a human being” occurred “during the course of a robbery,” and then said: “Ladies and Gentlemen, that is what the facts reflect. That is what the facts reflect in this particular case.” (Emphasis supplied). Agajanian concluded his closing argument at the guilt phase by again acknowledging that Visciotti committed first degree murder. He said:
I think the bottom line in this case, ladies and gentlemen, if we evaluate it from the evidence, if we evaluate it from what we have before us, the good, the bad, the ugly, I think that, plus the employment of the reasonable doubt standard in this particular case will lead you to a verdict, even though it be first degree murder, that we have a killing which is not premeditated, which is not deliberated, which is not well thought out, which is not pondered, but, nevertheless, committed.
(Emphasis supplied).
In Swanson, we found that Cronic applied when a lawyer conceded his client’s guilt at trial, reasoning that “[a] lawyer who informs the jury that it is his view of
The majority argues that Agajanian did not abandon Visciotti during his closing argument because Agajanian argued to the jury that “the crime was not premeditated” and “Visciotti lacked the specific intent to kill.” However, once Agajanian conceded that Visciotti committed felony murder, these arguments about Visciotti’s state of mind during the killing became irrelevant. As Agajanian explained to the jury during his closing argument, a killing during the commission of felony robbery is first degree murder regardless of the defendant’s state of mind.
The majority also hypothesizes that Agajanian’s concession was a strategic attempt to avoid the imposition of the death penalty, reasoning that “a jury might be less likely to impose the death penalty on someone convicted of felony murder, as opposed to someone who set out to commit a premeditated murder.” This hypothesis is unsupported by Agajanian’s closing argument during the penalty phase, in which he told the jury that there was no mitigating evidence related to the circumstances of the crime or Visciotti’s mental state. This hypothesis is also unsupported by Agajanian’s testimony, during the state ha-beas hearing, that the family sympathy mitigation strategy was his only strategy to avoid imposition of the death penalty. Just as we cannot evaluate the reasonableness of counsel’s strategic decisions through the “distorting effects of hindsight,” we cannot, in hindsight, attribute to counsel a strategy that he did not actually have in order to make sense of his otherwise inexplicable conduct. Strickland,
There is no doubt that this case was a difficult one to defend. However, as the Supreme Court instructed in Cronic, “even when no theory of defense is available, if the decision to stand trial has been made, counsel must hold the prosecution to its heavy burden of proof beyond reasonable doubt.”
