Willie CLISBY, Petitioner-Appellee, Cross-Appellant, v. Charlie JONES, Warden, Holman Unit, Alabama Department of Corrections, Respondent-Appellant, Cross-Appellee.
No. 89-7209.
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit.
May 4, 1992.
960 F.2d 925
Before TJOFLAT, Chief Judge, and FAY, KRAVITCH, HATCHETT, ANDERSON, EDMONDSON, COX, BIRCH and DUBINA, Circuit Judges.
TJOFLAT, Chief Judge:
Petitioner Willie Clisby, Jr., is incarcerated in an Alabama prison under a sentence of death for nighttime burglary of an occupied dwelling during the course of which one of the occupants is intentionally killed. See
Part I of this opinion discusses petitioner‘s due process claim under Ake v. Oklahoma, 470 U.S. 68, 105 S.Ct. 1087, 84 L.Ed.2d 53 (1985). Part II instructs the district court below, and all other district courts in this circuit, to resolve all constitutional claims raised in a petition for habeas
I.
Petitioner argues that he was denied due process of law by not receiving the assistance of a competent psychiatrist for sentencing purposes.4 Ake v. Oklahoma, 470 U.S. 68, 105 S.Ct. 1087, 84 L.Ed.2d 53 (1985).5 In Ake, the Supreme Court held that the Due Process Clause‘s guarantee of fundamental fairness requires that a state, “at a minimum, assure the [indigent] defendant access to a competent psychiatrist who will conduct an appropriate examination and assist in the evaluation, preparation, and presentation of the defense” whenever an indigent defendant “demonstrates to the trial judge that his sanity at the time of the offense is to be a significant factor at trial.” Id. at 83, 105 S.Ct. at 1096.6 As applied to the penalty
Having been supplied with a psychiatric expert, petitioner does not allege a denial of psychiatric assistance, but a denial of competent psychiatric assistance. Although petitioner‘s claim thereby differs from Ake claims previously considered by this court, we see no reason substantially to diverge from our two-step analysis of
We begin by reviewing the facts available to the trial court at the time when it is said to have denied petitioner a fair trial by refusing to grant petitioner access to a competent psychiatric expert. For purposes of this opinion, we will assume that petitioner made the preliminary showing required by Ake to be entitled to psychiatric assistance at sentencing. As petitioner complains of the trial court‘s failure to provide him with competent psychiatric assistance, rather than with psychiatric assistance of any form, we need concern ourselves only with the facts that could have indicated to the trial court that the psychiatrists who examined petitioner provided incompetent assistance.
Petitioner was arrested on November 15, 1979. Pursuant to a court order, Dr. Robert Estock examined petitioner for competency to stand trial on December 7, 1979.9 Counsel for petitioner at no time objected to the adequacy of Dr. Estock‘s competency examination. Following petitioner‘s arraignment on February 29, 1980, his counsel filed three motions requesting evaluation of petitioner‘s mental condition by a psychiatrist: a motion for psychiatric examination, a motion for court-appointed psychiatrist, and a motion for funds to hire a private psychiatrist. None of these motions specifically requested a psychiatric examination for possible mitigating circumstances. At a hearing on March 11, 1980, the trial court deemed the first motion granted as it already had ordered petitioner examined by Dr. Estock. It held the remaining two motions in abeyance pending the results of Dr. Estock‘s examination.10
No evidence regarding petitioner‘s mental condition was introduced during the guilt phase of petitioner‘s trial or during the sentencing hearing before the jury. The jury recommended the death sentence. Petitioner‘s counsel did not renew his two abeyant pre-trial motions until the sentencing hearing before the trial court on February 27, 1981. At this hearing, petitioner‘s counsel for the first time specifically requested that his client “be evaluated by a psychiatrist ... competent in the field to determine if Mr. Clisby suffers from such illness of delusions or derangement that
The trial court then entered findings and conclusions upholding the jury verdicts both as to guilt and as to sentence. After the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals had affirmed the trial court, Clisby v. State, 456 So.2d 86 (Ala.Crim.App.1982), the Alabama Supreme Court remanded the case to the Court of Criminal Appeals, Ex parte Clisby, Jr., 456 So.2d 95 (Ala.1983), which in turn remanded to the trial court for “reconsideration of its handling of Dr. Estock‘s report in view of the holdings of Estelle v. Smith, 451 U.S. 454, 101 S.Ct. 1866, 68 L.Ed.2d 359 (1981), and Proffitt v. Wainwright, 685 F.2d 1227 (11th Cir. 1982),” Clisby v. State, 456 So.2d 98, 99 (Ala.Crim.App.1983).
On remand, counsel for petitioner filed a motion for psychiatric examination “to be conducted in light of those mitigating factors or circumstances as set forth in
Q. Could you give us, please, sir, some of your educational background?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. As it relates to your medical training.
A. I received my medical training at the University of Rome, Italy. I graduated from there in 1960 and came to the United States. Did an internship at the [sic] New York State at Lawrence Hospital for one year, did a two year residency in anaesthesia at the Grasslands Hospital which is the West Chester Hospital. Went to Boston for one year of fellowship in anaesthesia for open heart surgery and practiced as anesthesiologist on Long Island at Mercy Hospital on [sic] Rockefeller Center in New York for approximately thirteen years. I decided to go into psychiatry and took a residency training program PGY two and three at Cherokee Mental Health Institute in Cherokee, Iowa and transferred for my third year of specialty training to the University of Alabama and graduated from that program in approximately October 1979. Since that time I‘m also licensed in the State of Alabama.... I have been licensed in medicine since 1961 in New York State and Mississippi. After starting as attending assistant professor at the University of Alabama following my training one year later I took and passed the written boards for the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology and one year later I passed and completed taking the oral portion in 1982 of June [sic]. I have been working for about three years at the Smolian Clinic in the out patient department, the crisis center and I worked about two one-half days a week at the County Jail doing interviews for competency.
...
Q. I notice on Defendant‘s Exhibit Number One, please, sir, there is a category there that says, reason for interview and item one is checked which states competency and then handwritten out beside that is the word stand trial, is that correct?
A. Yes, sir, that is my feeling that was what it was for. Q. If that was the purpose of the interview what are you looking for in that regard during your interview?
...
A. I would divide it roughly into two parts even three. Number one the persons [sic] ability to understand legal proceedure [sic]. His understanding of legal proceedure [sic]. The function of the jury, the function that the judge performs in the Courtroom. The various attorney [sic] in the Courtroom, his understanding of his charges. His understanding of the seriousness of his charges, possible penalties that he faces from the charges, just get a general idea of how much he knows about the legal system. I would then be interested in finding out if this person had any of the recognized mental illnesses.
Q. What do you mean if he had any recognized mental illnesses?
A. Well, whether I detect any types of psychosis, neurosis or character disorder or whatever. Whether he was perhaps organically impaired leading to dementia and diminished intellectual capacity or diminished memory.
...
Q. Was that what you have outlined to us just now was that in fact, the nature of the interview that you had with Mr. Clisby?
A. Yes, sir, and to add the third item which I didn‘t. I would also be interested during the interview to see what his report [sic]—how he developed report [sic] with me and if he would be able to do that with his attorney in aiding in his own defense.
Q. What test did you give Mr. Clisby during this interview, if anything?
A. Number one I think I did a mental status examination which tests the patient‘s memory, intellectual functioning, perceptions, judgments, insights. I did some tests to determine his ability to do calculations. I did specific tests to determine his ability to register new items, to recall new items, to test his long and short term memory.
Q. Did you do any other tests?
A. In the line of general psychiatric examination I questioned him regarding various symptoms of the major mental illinesses [sic].
After petitioner had testified in his own behalf following Dr. Callahan‘s testimony, petitioner‘s counsel submitted to the court that, given the objective of Dr. Callahan‘s examination, the defense had been unable to obtain psychiatric assistance adequate to develop petitioner‘s purported mental infirmity as a possible mitigating circumstance. Significantly, petitioner‘s counsel never complained to the court about the adequacy of Dr. Callahan‘s examination in accomplishing its objective, namely to determine petitioner‘s competency, or about Dr. Callahan‘s general qualifications as a psychiatric expert. On the contrary, counsel for petitioner acknowledged that “[w]e had a doctor who testified here today ... that [petitioner] is competent to stand trial.” (Emphasis supplied.) Counsel for petitioner merely objected that “competency to stand trial is not the test and is not the criteria [sic] which is put in the statute concerning the proof or availability of proving mitigating circumstances.” See
When the trial court inquired whether “[i]n view of Doctor Callahan‘s testimony ... the defendant wish[ed] to be further examined,” counsel for petitioner responded “Yes, sir, sure do.” The trial court then ordered Dr. Callahan to reexamine petitioner the next day. Two weeks later, on May 10, 1983, Dr. Callahan again testified at yet another sentencing hearing before the trial court. According to Dr. Callahan‘s testimony, he had examined petitioner on April 27 for forty-five to sixty minutes regarding mitigating circumstances. We again quote from Dr. Callahan‘s testimony on direct examination regarding the specifics of this examination:
Q. What questions did you ask Mr. Clisby?
A. At the time of that examination I went into as much as the Defendant would allow the circumstances around which the events occurred which brought him to trial. His past psychiatric history. I discussed his family relationships and what influence they might have had on his present condition. I attempted to elicit any evidence of an emotional or mental disturbance which may have influenced his actions. I tried to determine what his capacity for understanding the nature of his act and conforming his behavior to the requirements of the law might be.
Q. And at the time, ... you were made aware that there was a previous homicide?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. As well as a homicide involved in the present case, is that correct?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. So, you were aware of two homicides?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And you were aware some what [sic] of his family background, the fact that his mother is deceased as well as his father, is that correct?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And he was raised by someone other than his parents from adolescent years on?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. With those facts in mind would that give you any indication that there may be some disorder with Mr. Clisby?
A. In speaking to the Defendant I was unable to determine any disorder other than possibly anti-social personality disorder.
Q. What do you mean anti-social personality disorder?
A. That he has had difficulty in the past in conforming his conduct to the rules of society. That he is not respectful of the rights of others, that he has a poor work history. That his ability or his—[sic] to set long term goals is somewhat different.
Counsel for petitioner did not object either to the adequacy of Dr. Callahan‘s second examination or to Dr. Callahan‘s qualification to perform this examination. In particular, counsel did not suggest that Dr. Callahan‘s lack of familiarity with the Alabama death penalty statute on the date of the first hearing on remand11 rendered Dr. Callahan incapable of performing an adequate examination of petitioner for mitigating circumstances the next day. As at the first hearing on remand, counsel for petitioner instead acknowledged that “a Doctor has come into Court and said that there is an existence of some mitigating circumstances.” (Emphasis supplied.)
At the conclusion of the second hearing, the trial court again entered findings and conclusions upholding the jury‘s sentence recommendation. On appeal, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals remanded to the trial court for further consideration of psychiatric evidence in light of Lockett v. Ohio, 438 U.S. 586, 98 S.Ct. 2954, 57 L.Ed.2d 973 (1978), and Eddings v. Oklahoma, 455 U.S. 104, 102 S.Ct. 869, 71 L.Ed.2d 1 (1982). Clisby v. State, 456 So.2d 99 (Ala.Crim.App.1983).
No evidence was presented at the sentencing hearing on second remand. During his argument to the court, petitioner‘s
Petitioner‘s claim of a due process violation collapses as soon as one seeks to identify the trial court‘s ruling that purportedly rendered petitioner‘s trial fundamentally unfair.12 Petitioner‘s counsel only once alerted the trial court to what might be construed as Dr. Callahan‘s failure to provide competent assistance. After the first hearing on the first remand, petitioner‘s counsel suggested to the trial court that he had been unable to obtain adequate psychiatric assistance for sentencing purposes because Dr. Callahan had examined petitioner only regarding competency to stand trial, and not regarding the existence of any mitigating circumstances. In response, the trial court ordered Dr. Callahan to examine petitioner with respect to mitigating circumstances. Petitioner‘s counsel never again complained of inadequate psychiatric assistance, even though he had plenty of opportunities to do so at the hearing immediately following Dr. Callahan‘s second examination on the first remand and at the hearing on the second, and final, remand. Even ignoring petitioner‘s failure to identify a due process violation in any particular ruling by the trial court, the trial court‘s immediate response to the first and only suggestion of inadequate psychiatric assistance, the absence of any further such complaints, and the information available to the trial court until the day it entered the final findings and conclusions compel the conclusion that petitioner was not denied a fair trial.
Unable to pinpoint the ruling in which the trial court denied him due process by violating his right to competent psychiatric assistance, petitioner is left with a naked complaint about the purported incompetence of Dr. Callahan‘s assistance. Stripped of its due process pretensions, petitioner‘s claim therefore amounts to an allegation of expert incompetence akin to an ineffectiveness of counsel claim under the Sixth Amendment. Ake, however, exclusively relied on due process grounds and explicitly refused to consider the applicability of the Sixth Amendment. Ake, 470 U.S. at 87 n. 13, 105 S.Ct. at 1098 n. 13. Although Clisby raises a Sixth Amendment claim of incompetent psychiatric assistance in his petition, he cannot raise it on appeal, and we cannot address it, because the district court has yet to rule on this claim. This observation carries our discussion over into part II, where we instruct the district court and all other district courts within this circuit to resolve all constitutional claims presented in a petition for writ of habeas corpus pursuant to
II.
Clisby‘s amended habeas petition originally presented a total of twenty-five claims of constitutional violations grouped
Upon issuance of the district court‘s judgment, respondent filed a motion to alter or amend judgment, urging the court, inter alia, to address the ineffective assistance of counsel claims it had left unresolved. The motion did not mention the Sixth and Eighth Amendment claims relating to the alleged incompetence of Clisby‘s psychiatric assistance. The court‘s amended judgment issued in response to respondent‘s motion did not dispose of the ineffective assistance of counsel claims, or any other remaining claims.
At oral argument, respondent urged us to consider the ineffective assistance claims not addressed by the district court. This we clearly cannot do. We can do no more than remand the case to the district court to consider all remaining claims, including all claims alleging ineffective assistance of counsel and all claims alleging incompetent psychiatric assistance.
We nevertheless seize this opportunity to express our deep concern over the piecemeal litigation of federal habeas petitions filed by state prisoners, as exemplified by the district court‘s failure to resolve all claims in this case. The Supreme Court only recently has reemphasized the obligation of federal courts to consider the important interests of comity and finality implicated in federal habeas review of state convictions and sentences. See e.g., Coleman v. Thompson, 501 U.S. 722, 111 S.Ct. 2546, 2552, 2554-55, 115 L.Ed.2d 640 (1991); McCleskey v. Zant, 499 U.S. 467, 111 S.Ct. 1454, 1468-70, 113 L.Ed.2d 517 (1991); Penry v. Lynaugh, 492 U.S. 302, 313-315, 109 S.Ct. 2934, 2944, 106 L.Ed.2d 256 (1989); Duckworth v. Eagan, 492 U.S. 195, 208-10, 109 S.Ct. 2875, 2883, 106 L.Ed.2d 166 (1989) (O‘Connor, J., concurring) (quoting Harris v. Reed, 489 U.S. 255, 280-82, 109 S.Ct. 1038, 1053, 103 L.Ed.2d 308 (1989) (Kennedy, J., dissenting)); Teague v. Lane, 489 U.S. 288, 304-11, 109 S.Ct. 1060, 1072-75, 103 L.Ed.2d 334 (1989) (plurality opinion); see also In re Blodgett, 502 U.S. 236, 112 S.Ct. 674, 116 L.Ed.2d 669 (1992). Our court likewise has been sensitive to the disruptive effect federal habeas review has on a state‘s criminal justice system:
Until [federal habeas] proceedings have been concluded, they cast doubt on a prisoner‘s conviction and interfere with the state‘s administration of its corrections program. Our procedures for handling habeas petitions are designed, in part, to minimize such disruption. For example, our rules discourage untimely and successive petitions, see Rule 9, Delayed or Successive Petitions, Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases, 28 fol. § 2254 (1982), and we emphasize the importance of litigating all of a petitioner‘s claims in one habeas proceeding, both at the trial and appellate levels.
Blake v. Kemp, 758 F.2d 523, 542 (11th Cir. 1985) (Tjoflat, J., dissenting) (citations omitted), cert. denied, 474 U.S. 998, 106 S.Ct. 374, 88 L.Ed.2d 367 (1985).
We are disturbed by the growing number of cases in which we are forced to remand for consideration of issues the dis
A claim for relief for purposes of this instruction is any allegation of a constitutional violation. Clisby‘s petition serves to illustrate this definition. Claims one and two amount to separate claims for relief because an allegation of one constitutional violation and an allegation of another constitutional violation constitute two distinct claims for relief, even if both allegations arise from the same alleged set of operative facts.15 Policy considerations clearly favor the contemporaneous consideration of allegations of constitutional violations grounded in the same factual basis: “a one-proceeding treatment of a petitioner‘s case enables a more thorough review of his claims, thus enhancing the quality of the judicial product.” See Blake, 758 F.2d at 543 (Tjoflat, J., dissenting); see also Rose v. Lundy, 455 U.S. 509, 520, 102 S.Ct. 1198, 1204, 71 L.Ed.2d 379 (1982) (“To the extent that the [‘total exhaustion‘] requirement reduces piecemeal litigation, both the courts and the prisoner should benefit, for as a result the district court will be more likely to review all of the prisoner‘s claims in a single proceeding, thus providing for a more focused and thorough review.“); Galtieri v. Wainwright, 582 F.2d 348, 356 (5th Cir.1978) (en banc); Smith, 887 F.2d at 1422 (Tjoflat, J., specially concurring).
This benefit becomes particularly apparent in the case of a district court order granting habeas relief on claim A, while reserving judgment on claim B. Suppose the district court‘s grant of relief is reversed on appeal and, on remand, the court develops facts relating to claim B. Suppose further that the court, in the course of examining B‘s factual basis, becomes aware of facts relevant to its disposition of A, which it had not previously developed. The law of the case doctrine would now bar the court from granting relief on claim A, because its disposition of claim A had already been reversed on appeal. The possibility of such an unjust resolution looms especially large in a case like Clisby‘s, where the district court decides not to address all alleged constitutional infirmities arising from a single alleged set of operative facts. The fact findings necessary to dispose of one of several closely related claims very well might inform the disposition of another claim.
While a partial disposition of claims raised in a habeas petition, at first glance, may well appear to serve judicial economy, a closer look at the scenarios such a disposition might engender clearly establishes the opposite. The following discussion of these scenarios in the context of a 1989 case, Smith v. Zant, 887 F.2d 1407 (11th Cir.1989) (en banc), applies lock, stock, and barrel to the present case and thereby not only elucidates how the district court‘s piecemeal consideration of Clisby‘s petition threatens to undermine judicial economy, but also demonstrates that the district court‘s action in the present case represents anything but an isolated incident. The passage proceeds on the assumption that we affirm the district court‘s grant of the writ with respect to the sentence, while leaving petitioner‘s remaining challenges to his conviction unresolved.
[J]udicial economy might be served in the following situation: at the new sen
tencing trial conducted in state court, a life sentence might be imposed, and petitioner might decide to accept that sentence without returning to the district court to seek relief from his conviction by litigating the unadjudicated claims that challenge his conviction.16 He might accept a life sentence, for instance, if he fears that a second trial to determine his guilt would again result in a conviction [of capital] murder, thereby subjecting him once more to a possible death sentence in the sentencing phase that would follow. In such a situation, petitioner might request the district court to dismiss his outstanding habeas claims, and the litigation would end. Even if petitioner fears reconviction for the offense of [capital] murder, however, he might not accept the life sentence and thereby end the matter.... [Petitioner might] make an argument—sufficiently meritorious at least to require consideration by a court—that once a life sentence is imposed in the resentencing trial originally ordered by the district court, the state is thereafter precluded from seeking imposition of the death penalty after a new trial on the [capital] murder charge. See, for example, the debate between the majority and Justice Harlan, in North Carolina v. Pearce, 395 U.S. 711, 749-50, 89 S.Ct. 2072, 2088, 23 L.Ed.2d 656 (1969) (Harlan, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (“[T]he defendant‘s choice to appeal an erroneous conviction is protected by the rule that he may not again be placed in jeopardy of suffering the greater punishment not imposed at the first trial.“). If successful in such an argument, petitioner would then run no risk of a second death sentence even if reconvicted of [capital] murder and could litigate with impunity the remaining habeas claims challenging his conviction.
In other scenarios, a habeas petitioner has obvious incentive to litigate his remaining claims, thereby prolonging the litigation. If petitioner is optimistic about a more favorable outcome were the guilt phase of his trial to be repeated, for example, he will almost assuredly press the remaining habeas claims challenging his conviction. Even if he has received a life sentence at the new state court sentencing trial, that sentence would still be based on his original conviction [of capital murder]. Conviction of a lesser-included offense would mean a correspondingly lesser sentence. And if a petitioner is dissatisfied with his new sentence, e.g., he receives a death sentence once again, he can certainly be expected to press the remaining habeas claims challenging his conviction.
...
[W]hether the court of appeals reverses or affirms a district court‘s grant of relief from a habeas petitioner‘s sentence based on less than all of petitioner‘s claims, federal judicial economy is undermined. In the event of reversal and remand to the district court, [as in the present case,] the district court will spend additional time and effort re-examining claims of sentencing [and, in the present case, also conviction] error that could have been disposed of in one proceeding. Even if the court of appeals affirms the grant of sentencing relief, as long as the petitioner remains without relief from his conviction, he will be back before the district court to litigate the undecided claims that challenge his conviction. Appeals will surely follow, taken either by petitioner or by the State....
When, as in [Smith and the present case], the district court orders the State to repeat the sentencing phase of the
Smith, 887 F.2d at 1420-1421 (Tjoflat, J., specially concurring).
The havoc a district court‘s failure to address all claims in a habeas petition may wreak in the federal and state court systems compels us to require all district courts to address all such claims. Accordingly, this court, from now on, will vacate the district court‘s judgment without prejudice and remand the case for consideration of all remaining claims whenever the district court has not resolved all such claims. The procedure we announce today is to be followed for all petitions for writ of habeas corpus pursuant to
III.
For the reasons set forth in part I above, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND the case for further proceedings.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
EDMONDSON, Circuit Judge, specially concurring:
I concur in the judgment. For background on my views, see Clisby v. Jones, 907 F.2d 1047 (11th Cir.1990), and United States v. Jones, 899 F.2d 1097, 1103 (11th Cir.1990). (Edmondson, J., concurring).
COX, Circuit Judge, specially concurring:
I concur in the judgment and join Part II of Chief Judge Tjoflat‘s opinion. I adhere to the view that the panel opinion correctly resolved the issues addressed in Part I of the opinion. See Clisby v. Jones, 907 F.2d 1047 (11th Cir.1990).
BIRCH, Circuit Judge, concurring specially:
I concur in the judgment.
Notes
- Petitioner was deprived of his constitutional rights under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments because he was not adequately examined by a psychologist or psychiatrist.
- Petitioner was deprived of his constitutional rights under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments because he was not adequately examined by a psychologist or psychiatrist.
- Petitioner was deprived of his constitutional rights under the Fourteenth Amendment because he was not adequately examined by a psychologist or psychiatrist.
- Petitioner was deprived of his constitutional rights under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments because his trial counsel, left without the benefit of a psychiatric or psychological evaluation of petitioner, was forced to abandon the insanity defense.
- Petitioner was deprived of his constitutional rights under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments because his trial counsel, left without the benefit of a psychiatric or psychological evaluation of petitioner, was prevented from presenting meaningful mitigating evidence at the sentencing phase.
- Petitioner was deprived of his constitutional rights under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments because his trial counsel, having been denied the necessary funds, did not adequately present mitigating evidence at the sentencing phase.
- Petitioner was deprived of his constitutional rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments because he was convicted and sentenced on the basis of a confession obtained before he had been advised of his Miranda rights.
- Petitioner was deprived of his constitutional rights under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments because he was convicted and sentenced on the basis of a confession obtained before he had been advised of his Miranda rights.
- Petitioner was deprived of his constitutional rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments because persons with conscientious and religious scruples about imposing the death penalty were excluded from his jury, thereby depriving him of a jury constituting a representative cross-section of the community.
- Petitioner was deprived of his constitutional rights under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments because his jury did not constitute a representative cross-section of the community.
- Petitioner was deprived of his constitutional rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments because he did not have adequate notice of the laws and procedural rules applicable to his case.
- Petitioner was deprived of his constitutional rights under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments because he did not have adequate notice of the laws and procedural rules applicable to his case.
- Petitioner was deprived of his constitutional rights under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments because electrocution as administered in Alabama is an unnecessarily cruel means of execution.
- Petitioner was deprived of his constitutional rights under the Fourteenth Amendment because his sentence was not subject to adequate appellate review.
- Petitioner was deprived of his rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments because, under the factual circumstances of his case, the death penalty is a disproportionately severe and excessive punishment and was applied in an arbitrary, capricious and freakish fashion.
- Petitioner was deprived of his rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments because the Alabama death penalty has been discriminatorily applied against black defendants, impoverished defendants and male defendants, and petitioner‘s death penalty was imposed pursuant to this discriminatory pattern and practice.
- Petitioner was deprived of his due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment because the prosecutor made improper statements during closing argument.
- Petitioner was deprived of his equal protection rights under the Fourteenth Amendment because the prosecutor made improper statements during closing argument.
- Petitioner was deprived of his rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments because he was sentenced to death by the trial court in a resentencing hearing following a jury recommendation of death that did not rely on any psychiatric evidence concerning petitioner‘s mitigating mental condition.
- Petitioner was deprived of his rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments because his confession was obtained improperly.
- Petitioner was deprived of his rights under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments because his confession was obtained improperly.
- Petitioner was deprived of his rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments because he did not have adequate notice of the statutory aggravating circumstances.
- Petitioner was deprived of his rights under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments because he did not have adequate notice of the statutory aggravating circumstances.
- Petitioner was deprived of his rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments because the jurors did not properly understand their role in the imposition of the death penalty.
- Petitioner was deprived of his rights under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments because the jurors did not properly understand their role in the imposition of the death penalty.
Q. Have you ever had occasion to read or become aware of Alabama‘s capital homicide statute and the listing or verbage [sic] of the aggravating and mitigating circumstances contained therein?
A. No, I haven‘t.
Q. Are you familiar with the capital murder statute at all?
A. Only vaguely?
Q. And yet you have been dealing in the psychiatric field as it concerns criminal conduct or criminals for three or three and one-half years?
A. I have not been called in to testify in regard to the mitigating circumstances in a capital murder case. I didn‘t feel that today I was going to be called in to that. I was seeing the patient as was listed on the things for competency to stand trial and therefore I didn‘t review that law.
We further note that the rule announced in part II of this opinion in no way affects our discretion to remand any habeas case for the disposition of undecided claims, even if that case should not be subject to the rule established in part II because it was decided in the district court prior to the expiration of one hundred and twenty days following the date of this opinion.
