Filed: Oct. 29, 1992
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT No. 90-3764 ALVIN SCOTT LOYD, Petitioner-Appellant, versus JOHN P. WHITLEY, Warden, Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, Louisiana, Resppondent-Appellee. Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana ( October 29, 1992 ) Before POLITZ, Chief Judge, HIGGINBOTHAM and DUHÉ, Circuit Judges. POLITZ, Chief Judge: Having been convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to death by a jury, Alvin Scott Loyd pe
Summary: UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT No. 90-3764 ALVIN SCOTT LOYD, Petitioner-Appellant, versus JOHN P. WHITLEY, Warden, Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, Louisiana, Resppondent-Appellee. Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana ( October 29, 1992 ) Before POLITZ, Chief Judge, HIGGINBOTHAM and DUHÉ, Circuit Judges. POLITZ, Chief Judge: Having been convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to death by a jury, Alvin Scott Loyd pet..
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UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
No. 90-3764
ALVIN SCOTT LOYD,
Petitioner-Appellant,
versus
JOHN P. WHITLEY, Warden,
Louisiana State Penitentiary
at Angola, Louisiana,
Resppondent-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Louisiana
( October 29, 1992 )
Before POLITZ, Chief Judge, HIGGINBOTHAM and DUHÉ, Circuit Judges.
POLITZ, Chief Judge:
Having been convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to
death by a jury, Alvin Scott Loyd petitions for federal habeas
corpus relief claiming ineffective assistance of counsel in the
penalty phase of his capital murder trial. The district court
denied his petition. Finding ineffective assistance of counsel in
the penalty phase, we reverse, render, and remand.
Background
Chronology of Proceedings
Loyd was charged with the capital murder of three-year-old
Brandi Giovanetti.1 Local law enforcement officials apprehended
Loyd when he returned to his residence. Loyd was held in custody
at the Feliciana Forensic Facility following a Sanity Commission
determination that he was not competent to stand trial. After four
months Loyd was deemed competent to stand trial.
A jury found Loyd guilty and imposed the death penalty. The
Louisiana Supreme Court affirmed the conviction but vacated the
death sentence, remanding for a new sentencing trial because a
faulty instruction to a hesitant jury violated the integrity of the
unanimous jury verdict. At the second sentencing trial the jury
again imposed the death penalty. The sentence was affirmed on
1
The basic facts of the case have been established in the
state proceedings:
On the evening of April 26, 1981, Tina Giovanetti and her
three-year-old daughter were walking home after attending
a fair in Terrebonne Parish. They accepted defendant's
offer of a ride in his pick-up truck. When he reached
the Giovanetti home, the defendant asked if he could come
in. The woman refused his request and stepped out of the
truck. Before she could remove her daughter, however,
the defendant drove off with the little girl inside the
cab. The defendant traveled to the Mississippi River,
crossed into St. John the Baptist Parish on the Lutcher
ferry, and continued down a desolate dirt road near a
pipeline. At a remote spot, he raped the child, drowned
her in a ditch, carried her body into an adjacent swamp,
and covered it with leaves.
State v. Loyd,
489 So. 2d 898, 900 (La. 1986) (quoting State v.
Loyd,
459 So. 2d 498, 500 (La. 1984)).
2
appeal.2
The state trial court denied Loyd's first petition for
post-conviction relief but the Supreme Court of Louisiana granted
a stay of execution and remanded the case to the state trial court
for an evidentiary hearing on four issues, including the
ineffective assistance of counsel claim.3 After a hearing, the
state court concluded that the performance of counsel at the second
sentencing trial was deficient; however, the state court denied
habeas relief on the ground that counsel's deficient performance
did not prejudice Loyd. The Louisiana Supreme Court denied Loyd's
application for review, assigning no reasons.
After exhausting state court remedies, Loyd sought federal
habeas relief. The district court granted a stay of execution but
ultimately denied Loyd's requested relief. In regard to the
ineffective assistance claim, the district court concluded that,
contrary to the finding by the state court, counsel's performance
was not deficient. We vacated the district court finding on the
ground that proper deference had not been given to the state
court's findings of fact as required by 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d).4 We
2
State v. Loyd,
489 So. 2d 898 (La. 1986), cert. denied,
481 U.S. 1042,
107 S. Ct. 1984,
95 L. Ed. 2d 823 (1987), reh'g denied
of cert. denial,
483 U.S. 1011,
107 S. Ct. 3244,
97 L. Ed. 2d 749
(1987).
3
State ex rel. Loyd v. Butler,
514 So. 2d 446 (La. 1987);
532 So. 2d 758 (La. 1988).
4
Loyd v. Smith,
899 F.2d 1416 (5th Cir. 1990).
3
directed the district court to conduct an evidentiary hearing if it
concluded that the record was not fully developed.
The district court did not conduct a hearing but reviewed the
state habeas court findings, adopted some, rejected others, and
reached conclusions of its own. The court again held that the
performance of counsel was not deficient and additionally found
that any hypothetical deficiency did not prejudice Loyd.
State Proceedings: Sentencing and
Post-Conviction Hearing
After conducting an evidentiary hearing, the state habeas
court concluded that the professional performance of Loyd's defense
counsel in the 1985 sentencing trial fell below reasonable
professional standards. Loyd's defense team was composed of three
attorneys. Court-appointed counsel Gordon Hackman and Randy Lewis
had represented Loyd in the 1983 proceedings and had asked
permission to withdraw as counsel three weeks before the second
sentencing trial. This request was denied but William Allison was
added to, and headed, the defense team. At that time Allison's law
practice was, as described by him, "ninety percent civil, various
mix and ten percent criminal." Allison had practiced law for 14
years and had participated in approximately six criminal jury
trials, including one capital case. Hackman, who had been lead
counsel at the guilt/innocence phase, had a practice composed
primarily of civil litigation, although his firm had accepted a
number of criminal cases in the mid 1970s. Lewis was his law
partner. At the state habeas hearing, all three attorneys
4
expressed dissatisfaction with their representation of Loyd in the
1985 sentencing trial.
At trial the defense called three doctors, all of whom had
been retained by the state to determine Loyd's competence to stand
trial. Also in evidence at the penalty phase were sanitarium
admission papers reciting an initial diagnosis of "Antisocial
Personality Disorder," a Psychological report, a Neuropsychiatric
Examination report, a Neurological Examination report, and the
report of a social worker. Most of the psychological testimony was
presented by Dr. Cox, Loyd's treating physician at the Feliciana
Forensic Facility, where Loyd was held during the four months that
he was diagnosed as incompetent. Allison spoke with Dr. Cox for
the first time on the day of the trial, for 45 minutes during the
lunch hour. Also testifying were Dr. St. Martin, the Feliciana
coroner and a member of the Sanity Commission that found Loyd
initially incompetent, and Dr. Ritter, the other Sanity Commission
member.
Although Dr. St. Martin described "an in-depth exam" with
Loyd, Dr. Ritter emphasized that he "did not do a detailed
personality inventory on Mr. Loyd." Dr. Ritter also described the
role of the Sanity Commission as limited:
When you evaluate someone in a prison setting and someone
who is depressed sometimes that's very difficult to get
any details. Besides you're there for two specific
purposes. Not to get a personality inventory, to make a
detailed study of personality, but to determine if there
are any mental diseases or defect which could impair his
ability to proceed to trial or could impair his ability
to tell the difference between right and wrong.
No independent psychiatrist or psychologist testified on
5
Loyd's behalf in the sentencing phase despite the fact found by the
state court that Loyd's sanity was a critical issue. Allison had
initially requested $1,000 to hire an independent, neutral
psychiatrist to testify in Loyd's defense; $600 was approved.
Thereafter, according to the state court, "Allison made several
half-hearted attempts to procure [independent, psychiatric]
services, but eventually abandoned those efforts." Hackman had
$1,250 which had been given to him by Loyd's mother to be used for
Loyd's defense. Hackman did not inform Allison of the availability
of these funds. Hackman did not pursue further psychiatric
testimony because he believed that such an attempt would have been
futile.
The state court made the factual finding that Hackman's
decision was based upon a failure to understand the difference
between the McNaughten test for sanity and the Louisiana mitigating
factors of "mental or emotional disturbance," or "mental disease or
defect."5 The state court also found that the aggregate funds
available were sufficient for an independent psychiatric analysis
of Loyd. The court concluded that "for counsel not to have sought
such an evaluation, where funds were available to do so, was an
error which fell below the professional standards of conduct
required to constitute proper representation."
Loyd's new habeas counsel sought the services of doctors whose
testimony in the state habeas evidentiary hearing presented a more
5
La. Code Crim. Pro. art. 905.5(b), (e).
6
detailed explanation of Loyd's mental impairments. Dr. Kenneth
Perkins, a clinical psychologist, reviewed the raw data from the
Feliciana tests and determined that to a large extent the data had
been misinterpreted in such a way that Loyd did not receive
additional necessary testing.6 Dr. Stephen Honor, also a clinical
psychologist, repeated the psychological tests; the raw data from
the new psychological tests mirrored the Feliciana raw data.
Dr. Honor, like Dr. Perkins, found that the Feliciana staff's
interpretation of the data understated the extent of Loyd's mental
impairments. Similarly, Dr. Barry Scanlon examined Loyd, reviewed
his records from Feliciana, and disagreed with the Feliciana
conclusions. Dr. Sanchez, the forensic psychiatrist requested by
counsel for the state, examined Loyd after both the state and the
defense accepted him as qualified. Because of the opinion
formulated after this review, Dr. Sanchez was called to testify by
Loyd's counsel.
The evidence presented at Loyd's sentencing trial -- evidence
based on the Feliciana conclusions -- markedly differs from the new
evidence.
1. Sanity
Sentencing Phase Testimony and Evidence
6
Dr. Perkins did not testify but his written report was
entered into evidence. Drs. Honor, Scanlon, and Sanchez all
testified at the state post-conviction hearings. Drs. Honor and
Scanlon also prepared detailed reports, which were entered into
evidence.
7
At the penalty phase, Drs. St. Martin and Ritter testified
that at the time of the crime, Loyd knew the difference between
right and wrong. Dr. Cox concurred that Loyd was "sane" at the
time of the crime. In the state habeas hearing, Dr. St. Martin
testified that he based his diagnosis of Loyd's sanity on "how he
was feeling, [he was not] hallucinating, his general psychological
condition at the time, and the things that he was able to do at the
site of the crime and after the crime." Dr. St. Martin stated that
he did not believe it was possible for individuals to "not show
. . . any psychosis any other time but just have a short burst of
psychosis."
New Testimony and Evidence
The experts presented by Loyd's habeas counsel all expressed
doubts regarding Loyd's sanity at the time of the crime. Dr. Honor
reported that:
While Mr. Loyd did apparently form an intent to kill the
child, the evidence of his mental and emotional state,
based upon his self report and the examination results,
strongly suggests that he would have been unable to
appreciate the significance of this act or the probable
consequences of this act. Therefore, at that point in
time it can be said that Mr. Loyd could not distinguish
between the concept of right and wrong.
Dr. Honor opined that there was an 80 to 90 percent probability
that Loyd did not understand his actions at the time of the crime.
Similarly, Dr. Scanlon reported that:
I think a convincing case can be made that Loyd was
incapable of distinguishing between right and wrong in
view of my conclusion that the quality of Loyd's acts
were delusional (psychotic) or delirious (impaired by
physical factors) . . . . Loyd may have had a rather
limited awareness that he was drowning, raping and
sodomizing a little girl (the "nature" of his acts) but
8
it is unlikely in view of his delusional (psychotic) or
delirious (impaired by physical factors) state that he
could have understood the moral significance of his acts
(the "quality" of his acts).
Dr. Honor described how Loyd could move in and out of a
psychotic state:
Loyd represents an individual who is a borderline
psychotic. He has a number of personality traits that
certainly appear to be [of] very long standing
duration. . . . [I]ndividuals [who] get that designation
. . . under reasonable circumstances are able to hold
themselves together. There is some kind of personality
integrity they can hold together. When individuals like
that are exposed to very stressful circumstances the
great likelihood is that there is going to be a
deterioration. . . . [I]t may in fact precipitate the
development of a frank psychosis. But probably in many,
many cases they become temporary episodes where the
person spontaneously regenerates so to speak after the
stressors have been . . . by-passed.
The sources of information "most pertinent" to Dr. Honor in making
this diagnosis were his clinical interviews with Loyd and Loyd's
letters.
Dr. Sanchez, an expert forensic psychiatrist frequently
appointed to state sanity commissions, considered Loyd to have
experienced a "psychotic episode" with "sensations of losing
control over his mind." Loyd knew right from wrong at some points,
but not at others.
2. Inability to Stand Trial
Sentencing Phase Testimony and Evidence
The Sanity Commission determined that Loyd was initially
incompetent to stand trial because "he was severely depressed and
he could not best assist his counsel at that time." Dr. Ritter, a
9
member of the Sanity Commission, confirmed the Commission's finding
that Loyd was depressed:
[Loyd] was crying, expressed remorse, . . . best thing I
could say, is he, he was suffering from depression, he
was feeling blue, remorseful, down in the dumps, and as
a result of that he was more difficult than usual to talk
to because his thoughts were not coming very rapidly, he
was slowed up, like most people who are depressed
experience.
Dr. Cox, Loyd's treating physician at Feliciana, also stated that
Loyd had been depressed and despondent, but stated that Loyd's
incarceration for the crime was a major part of his depression.
Similarly, Dr. St. Martin acknowledged that it was very possible
that remorse at being caught could have caused Loyd's depression.
New Testimony and Evidence
Dr. Honor disagreed with "[t]he conclusion by the forensic
experts that Mr. Loyd's level of disturbance was likely to be a
result of his reaction to his crime and his arrest rather than a
representation of his general psychological state."
3. Psychological Traits Relevant to Crime
Sentencing Phase Testimony and Evidence
Dr. Ritter said little regarding Loyd's personality traits
because he did not do a detailed personality inventory on Loyd.7
7
Dr. Ritter did testify that "generally in somebody who
has committed that type of crime" displacement has occurred:
"[T]he strong feelings that go along with abuse of children, are
feelings that have been transferred from another adult to that
child. Feelings of frustration, rage, this type of thing."
Dr. Ritter added that in general, child abusers were themselves
abused as children.
10
Dr. Cox had ordered a neurology exam and other psychological tests.
At the time of trial, Dr. Cox stated: "I cannot explain why this
happened." Defense counsel questioned Dr. Cox regarding specific
findings in a psychological evaluation report performed at
Feliciana. At the onset, Dr. Cox stated that he agreed with parts
of the report yet had doubts regarding other conclusions. This
report was admitted into evidence. The report recited the probable
etiology of the crime:
Mr. Loyd was himself a victim of child abuse and he had
a very poor model for adult masculine behavior. He was
not able to integrate the antisocial patterns of behavior
he learned from his father with the excessively
moralistic standards he was taught by his mother. One
consequence of this confusion was that he had not
obtained a stable adult sexual adjustment. And another
consequence was that he developed a pattern of substance
abuse.
Regarding this conclusion, Dr. Cox testified: "I think it's very
clear that he developed a pattern of substance abuse. As far as
stable adult sexual adjustment, I can't comment on that." Dr. Cox
testified that the following excerpts from the Feliciana report
were "consistent with Mr. Loyd's personality and makeup":
On the day of his crime, his intoxication rendered his
inhibitions ineffective. Apparently he committed the
crime cognizant of the wrongness of it but unwilling or
unable to stop himself . . . . Later overwhelmed by
horror over his actions he avoided memory of the events.
Regarding Loyd's history of child abuse, Dr. Cox testified
that a very high percentage of people who commit violent acts have
a history of abuse as children. He further explained that the kind
of stimulus that could trigger Loyd into blowing up included
stress, pressure, substance abuse, or sleep deprivation.
11
New Testimony and Evidence
Dr. Honor reviewed the raw test scores from the Feliciana
tests, performed his own tests, and found many of the raw test
scores to be consistent with the Feliciana results. Pursuant to
his interpretation, the test results evidence somatic delusions,
disordered thinking, chronic psychological maladjustment with
chronic disorientation, alienation and withdrawal. Dr. Honor found
Loyd to be "of a borderline psychotic nature [with] very clearly
paranoid ideology and schizophrenic personality characteristics."
"Diagnostically he is seen as manifesting a schizoid or schizotypal
personality . . . . The personality profile indicates extremely
high elevations in overall emotional disturbance, depression, and
schizophrenia." Dr. Honor explained the circumstances of the
crime:
Loyd's description of his subjective perceptions from the
time of being in the bar until after committing the crime
strongly suggests an altered state of consciousness, part
of which seems to be rooted in several somatic delusions
. . . . Mr. Loyd reports strong feelings of confusion
through the night and a dreamlike quality to his state of
consciousness . . . . The overwhelming feelings of being
threatened, which appear to have been significantly
exacerbated by his diminished state of cognition and his
underlying paranoid ideation, seems to have triggered a
response of rage and fear that became displaced onto this
child, who was, at the time, seen as a significant part
of this sense of threat. The decision to kill the child
seems to have been perceived as a means of eliminating
the threatening circumstances . . . . Loyd's sexual
attack of the child is seen as a violent weapon aimed at
silencing the child.
Dr. Perkins likewise concluded that the Feliciana
interpretation of Loyd's raw test data tended to overlook or
understate the extent of Loyd's chronic emotional disturbance.
12
Some of the patterns are "typically regarded as the classic
paranoid-schizophrenia profile." Drs. Perkins, Scanlon, and
Sanchez each found no basis for the Feliciana admissions report
diagnosis that Loyd has an antisocial personality disorder.8
Dr. Scanlon testified that the Feliciana psychological report
"was insufficient in terms of trying to . . . come up with an
explanation for Loyd's behavior." Dr. Scanlon believed that
physical impairment of thought was the ultimate cause of the crime:
I personally do not see Loyd's crime as primarily
determined by emotional or psychological factors . . . .
[T]he "form" his actions took (the killing of a little
girl after raping and sodomizing her) was probably
determined by "emotional or psychological factors" rooted
in Loyd's childhood experience. I believe, however, that
what triggered his actions was largely an organic (or
physical) impairment of thought.
4. Brain Damage
Sentencing Phase Testimony and Evidence
A neuropsychiatric report mentions scarring of the right
temple, weakness on Loyd's left side, and some decreases in sensory
response.9 The report concludes that Loyd "exhibits no evidence of
overt psychosis or brain syndrome" and that the "focal neurological
8
During the post-conviction state habeas evidentiary
hearing, Drs. Cox, Ritter, and St. Martin admitted that the
"antisocial personality disorder" diagnosis, which was shown to the
jury in a report in the sentencing phase was "in error."
Similarly, Dr. Fain, who conducted the Feliciana psychological
evaluation of Loyd, testified that Loyd is not a sociopath.
9
While at Feliciana, Loyd had complained of intermittent
weakness of the left extremity, causing him to drop objects and
experience occasional paresthetic numbness.
13
findings in terms of weakness and sensory deficit are fleeting and
would appear at this time to be hysterical in etiology." A
neurological exam, although finding some inconsistencies in sensory
responses, did not report neurological impairment or neuromuscular
disease.
The psychological evaluation explained:
Testing for Organic Brain Damage was not extensive. Some
evidence of problems coordinating movement in his left
hand was revealed, thus lending support to his complaints
of weakness in this area. It is not possible to say when
the damage might have been sustained. Other than that,
no evidence of brain damage was found . . . . [Loyd] may
have sustained some minor brain damage. This appears to
be unrelated to either the commission of the crime or his
memory loss.
New Testimony and Evidence
Dr. Perkins reported that the Feliciana tests inadequately
investigated the possibility of brain damage. According to
Dr. Perkins, the raw test scores from the Feliciana psychological
evaluation contained inconsistencies associated with underlying
organic factors, such as brain dysfunction. Dr. Perkins found that
the following facts point to the possibility of brain damage:
(1) that Loyd's mother sustained paint poisoning one month before
his birth, (2) family history of epilepsy, (3) family history of
dyslexia, (4) Loyd's history of head injuries, (5) the radiation
therapy Loyd received as an infant for the open exposure of blood
vessels in his temple, (6) family history of alcoholism, (7) Loyd's
personal history of chemical abuse, (8) Loyd's history of headache
experience, and (9) the possibility of a head injury while boating
on the day of the crime. Regarding the neurological exam performed
14
at Feliciana, Dr. Perkins stated:
The neurological exam at Feliciana observed the
left-handed weakness in [Loyd's] behavior as well as
significantly lower sensation to touch or pin prick on
the left side of his body, including arm and leg but was
regarded as probably hysterical symptomatology. That
certainly would be consistent with Dr. Fain's comment
that [Loyd] may tend to express anxiety through somatic
complaints, but it also may be indicating, again, a
nervous system disorder which, like the possibility of
his headaches, may be somatic reactions with neurological
basis which are activated by times of intense emotion
which would include anxiety, stress/tension, etc.
Dr. Honor reported that the tests of neuropsychological
functioning "while not definitive, are consistent with a diagnosis
of frontal lobe dysfunction. Such dysfunction would be expected to
have an impact on judgment, and higher levels of cognitive
functioning such as organization of thought and processing of
complex ideas."
Analysis
An ineffective assistance of counsel claim requires a two-part
showing that: (1) Counsel's performance was deficient, meaning
that "counsel made errors so serious that counsel was not
functioning as the 'counsel' guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth
Amendment"; and (2) the deficient performance prejudiced the
defendant by depriving him "of a fair trial, a trial whose result
is reliable."10 A state court conclusion regarding effective
assistance of counsel is a mixed question of law and fact. State
court findings of fact made in the course of deciding a sixth
10
Strickland v. Washington,
466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984).
15
amendment ineffectiveness claim are subject to the deference
requirement of section 2254(d).11
In determining whether counsel's representation passes
constitutional muster, we must make an independent evaluation based
on the state court's subsidiary fact findings; we need not defer
to the district court's conclusion.12
Performance of Counsel
"The proper measure of attorney performance remains simply
reasonableness under prevailing professional norms.13 All of the
circumstances must be considered. In this consideration, however,
we must guard against the temptations of hindsight and
second-guessing. Accordingly, a reviewing court must grant
11
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) provides:
In any proceeding instituted in a Federal court by an
application for a writ of habeas corpus by a person in
custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court, a
determination after a hearing on the merits of a factual
issue, made by a State court of competent jurisdiction in
a proceeding to which the applicant for the writ and the
State or an officer or agent thereof were parties,
evidenced by a written finding, written opinion, or other
reliable and adequate written indicia, shall be presumed
to be correct . . . [unless certain enumerated statutory
requirements are met, including:]
(8) . . . the Federal court on a consideration of
such part of the [state] record as a whole concludes that
such factual determination is not fairly supported by the
record. . . .
12
Nealy v. Cabana,
764 F.2d 1173, 1176-77 (5th Cir. 1985).
13
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688.
16
counsel's decisions a reasonable presumption of reasonability.14
Applying these guidelines, the state habeas court concluded that
the performance of counsel in Loyd's 1985 sentencing trial fell
below reasonable professional standards. The state court found
that funds for an independent psychiatric expert were available,
that Loyd's sanity was a critical issue, that counsel were aware of
the critical nature of Loyd's sanity, and that lead counsel made
only "half-hearted" attempts to obtain independent evidence
regarding this sanity and abandoned those efforts for no strategic
purpose. The court a quo acknowledged these factual findings as
binding pursuant to section 2254(d), but by discounting other state
findings as being erroneous or irrelevant, and by supplementing the
findings, the district court avoided the state court conclusion
that counsel's peformance was not within the range of professional
reasonability. The district court opined that calling Drs. Cox,
Ritter, and St. Martin "was more than reasonable and
constitutionally adequate under the circumstances prevailing at the
time of trial."
The district court discounted the state habeas court finding
that: "[T]he most compelling fact in the performance of counsel in
this matter is that they simply failed to develop independent
psychiatric evidence of mental disease or defect in a death case
where this line of investigation was clearly indicated." Regarding
this statement, the district court held that "to the extent that
14
Id. at 689-90.
17
the state court implied . . . that no statutory mitigating
circumstances were presented on Loyd's behalf at trial, . . . such
a conclusion is not supported by the record and is clearly
erroneous." The district court made the supplemental conclusion
that Loyd's counsel presented significant statutory mitigating
psychiatric testimony. We cannot agree, but accept as binding the
state court finding that defense counsel's failure to pursue a
crucial line of investigation in a capital murder case was not
professionally reasonable.
The state court found that Hackman did not appreciate the
distinction between the McNaughten rule and the mitigatiang
circumstances of mental disease or defect. Hackman, who was
court-appointed and did not wish to represent Loyd, testified at
the state hearing that despite his general experience with criminal
trials, he did not feel competent to handle the case, he was
convinced that the defense should have conducted additional
investigation and should have obtained the assistance of a forensic
psychiatrist. Allison, who had participated in at least six
criminal jury trials, testified that he did not believe that his
representation of Loyd contributed to the defense.15 The state
court discounted this testimony, stating: "[I]n the case of
15
When asked whether he did an effective job, Allison
responded: "I don't think I added anything to the Defense. I was
hampered by my lack of experience. I really in retrospect should
not have ever enrolled in this case. And perhaps they would have
found someone else more qualified and more competent enough to do
it. I was hampered by lack of funds, by geographic distance, and
by my lack of experience."
18
Mr. Allison, his personal abhorrence of the death penalty might
well have affected his later assessment of his conduct." The
district court accepted the state court decision to discount
Allison's testimony, but dismissed as inconsequential that court's
fact-finding that Hackman misunderstood the law regarding
mitigating circumstances. According to the district court,
Hackman's knowledge was irrelevant because Hackman was not lead
counsel.16 Aside from noting our consistent insistence that
effectiveness of counsel requires familiarity with current state
law,17 we refrain from further dissection of Hackman's role. The
essence and significance of the state court's finding of fact is
that no member of the defense team made the strategic decision
referred to in Strickland regarding the critical issue in this
death case.
The contrast between the data and testimony presented in the
1985 proceeding and the new evidence warrants our rejection of the
16
The district court concluded that Allison was lead
counsel and therefore reasoned that the state court decision
regarding Hackman was irrelevant because Hackman did not decide who
would be called as a witness in the 1985 sentencing proceeding.
Nonetheless, the district court also placed great weight on the
fact that Hackman, long before Allison arrived at the scene, had
retained a psychiatrist who had concluded that Loyd was sane
pursuant to the McNaughten test. Because Hackman did not discern
the difference between the legal test relevant in the
guilt/innocence phase and that relevant in the penalty phase, we
find support for the state court's rejecting the alleged
significance of the psychiatrist employed by Hackman.
17
Trass v. Maggio,
731 F.2d 288, 293 (5th Cir. 1984);
Kennedy v. Maggio,
725 F.2d 269, 272-73 (5th Cir. 1984); Vela v.
Estelle,
708 F.2d 954, 963-64 (5th Cir. 1983), cert. denied,
464
U.S. 1053 (1984).
19
district court's supplemental finding that Loyd's defense counsel
introduced significant mitigating evidence. The marked disparity
in testimony establishes that reasonable professional standards
require that counsel should have used readily available funds to
hire an independent psychiatrist to put Loyd's mental condition in
proper focus.
"[C]ounsel has a duty to make reasonable investigations or to
make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations
unnecessary.18 Counsel's professional duty may be met in more than
one way:
[S]trategic choices made after thorough investigation of
law and facts relevant to plausible options are virtually
unchallengeable; and strategic choices made after less
than complete investigation are reasonable precisely to
the extent that reasonable professional judgments support
the limitations on investigation. In other words,
counsel had a duty to make reasonable investigations or
to make a reasonable decision that makes particular
investigations unnecessary.19
The state court's factual findings make clear that the decision of
defense counsel not to pursue an independent psychological analysis
of Loyd was neither a strategic choice made after investigation nor
a strategic choice made in light of limits on investigation. There
were no limitations; funds were available. According to the state
factual findings, Allison's decision had nothing to do with
strategy; he wrongly assumed that funds were unavailable and he
abandoned what he knew to be an important pursuit. Hackman's
18
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 691.
19
Id. at 690-91.
20
decision had not been made after thorough investigation of the law;
Hackman was unaware of the law.20
Whether counsel's omission served a strategic purpose is a
pivotal point in Strickland and its progeny.21 The crucial
distinction between strategic judgment calls and plain omissions
has echoed in the judgments of this court.22 For example, in Nealy
20
We find unpersuasive the district court's supposition
that at the time of trial, "Loyd's attorneys had no basis for
assuming that they could have found a psychiatrist somewhere in the
country who would testify that Loyd may have a mental disease or
defect which impaired the petitioner's ability to appreciate the
criminalilty of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the
requirements of law." This conclusion clashes with the finding by
the state court that lead counsel did indeed decide that pursuit of
independent testimony was warranted, but abandoned what was
characterized as a "half-hearted" attempt.
21
See, e.g.,
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 691; Kimmelman v.
Morrison,
477 U.S. 365 (1986) (emphasis on fact that counsel's
failure "was not based on 'strategy,' but on counsel's mistaken
beliefs. . . .").
22
See Profitt v. Waldron,
831 F.2d 1245, 1249 (5th Cir.
1987) (where counsel's omission presented "no advantage" to the
defense, the court refused to accord "our usual deference to
tactical decisions"); Nealy v. Cabana,
764 F.2d 1173 (5th Cir.
1985); Cook v. Lynaugh,
821 F.2d 1072, 1078 (5th Cir. 1987)
(finding ineffective assistance with emphasis on fact that failure
to investigate was not a strategic choice); Martin v. McCotter,
796
F.2d 813, 819 (5th Cir. 1986), cert. denied,
479 U.S. 1057 (1987)
(because the extent of investigation and the extent that counsel's
decision constituted a "reasonable strategic choice" was unclear,
the court based its holding on the prejudice prong); see also
Selvage v. Lynaugh,
842 F.2d 89, 95 (5th Cir. 1988), cert. denied,
493 U.S. 973 (1989) (reasonable strategic decision not to pursue
mental background because state rebuttal could turn evidence
against the defendant); Kramer v. Butler,
845 F.2d 1291 (5th Cir.),
cert. denied,
488 U.S. 865 (1988) (counsel's decision not to pursue
more than one independent psychiatrist was reasonable where no
facts indicated that an insanity defense was tenable); Mattheson v.
King,
751 F.2d 1432, 1440 (5th Cir. 1985) (failure to investigate
fell "within the realm of sound trial strategy"); Bell v. Lynaugh,
828 F.2d 1085 (5th Cir.), cert. denied,
484 U.S. 933 (1987)
21
we found counsel's performance deficient and stressed that at a
post-conviction hearing, the defense counsel "did not testify that
such efforts would have been fruitless, nor did he claim that the
decision not to investigate was part of a calculated trial
strategy. He simply failed to make the effort."23 Counsel "'did
not choose, strategically or otherwise, to pursue one line of
defense over another. Instead, [he] simply abdicated his
responsibility to advocate his client's cause.'"24
Finding a void of available evidence on a critical issue in a
death penalty case, we hold that counsel's performance was not
professionally reasonable.
Prejudice
The prejudice component of the Strickland test requires a
showing
that there is a reasonable probability that, but for
counsel's unprofessional errors, the result of the
proceeding would have been different. A reasonable
probability is a probability sufficient to undermine
confidence in the outcome. In making the determination
whether the specified errors resulted in the required
prejudice, a court should presume . . . that the judge or
(emphasis on strategic motives for counsel decision). We
acknowledge that "strategy" is not necessarily the line of
demarcation for defense decisions to investigate. See, e.g., Smith
v. Black,
904 F.2d 950, 977 (5th Cir. 1990), vacated on other
grounds,
112 S. Ct. 1463 (1992).
23
764 F.2d at 1178.
24
Id. (citation omitted) (emphasis added in original).
22
jury acted according to law.25
The state court and the district court held that Loyd had not
demonstrated prejudice.
The state court found that the opinions of the experts
testifying in the habeas proceeding were, to some extent, based on
three unproven hypothetical facts: that Loyd was involuntarily
drugged, that he worked unusually long hours in excessive heat in
the days preceding the crime, and that he suffered a concussion on
a boat ride on the day of the crime. The state court declared
that, "the opinions of Drs. Honor, Scanlon, and Sanchez, to the
extent that they were based on these assumptions, would probably
have had no influence on the jury's assessment of petitioner's
psychological condition on the night of the crime."26 Regarding
frontal lobe brain damage,27 the state court observed that "no more
than a suspicion was indicated, even by his own experts, that this
irregularaity explained or excused the crime." The court
considered whether there was "a reasonable probability that the
remaining overall testimony of Drs. Honor, Scanlon and Sanchez as
25
466 U.S. at 694.
26
The court omitted reference to Dr. Perkins' report, which
was admitted into evidence, although Dr. Perkins did not testify.
Dr. Perkins did not examine Loyd; the state court presumably
discounted Dr. Perkins' opinions to the same extent that the other
expert opinions were dismissed.
27
Dr. Scanlon testified that the electroencephalogram
performed on Loyd indicated abnormalities but was not diagnostic of
any specific mental infirmity, such as epilepsy or a brain tumor.
23
to petitioner's diminished capacity or mental disease or defect,
would have been found by at least one juror, to be a mitigating
factor sufficient to change his or her verdict of death." The
court accepted the doctors' conclusions that Loyd suffered from a
mental disease or defect that in all probability predated the
crime. Yet, according to the court, "[t]he enormity of the crime
committed was so great that any mental disease or defect, short of
legal insanity, would simply not, in this court's opinion, have
tipped the balance in any juror['s] mind so as not to warrant a
sentence of death."
Giving deference to the state habeas decision, we accept as
unproved the theories that Loyd was drugged and exposed to
excessive heat, that he suffered a head injury on the day of the
crime, or that the clinical signs of physical abnormality in his
frontal lobe brain functions explained the crime. The state court
did not explain what portions of the experts' opinions rested on
these assumptions; however, it is apparent that the court found a
mental disease or defect predating the crime but did not find legal
insanity at the time of the crime. If the record were incomplete
with regard to this prejudice issue, we would remand for an
evidentiary hearing.28 Our review of the state habeas hearing,
however, discloses significant testimony and documentation
regarding the factors the experts used in assessing Loyd's mental
capacity. It is abundantly clear that significant portions of the
28
See
Kimmelman, 477 U.S. at 390-91.
24
experts' testimony were not based on the suggested unproven
factors.
When questioned regarding the basis of his diagnostic
conclusions, Dr. Honor stated that he based his analysis on a
combination of his examination of Loyd in person, his meeting with
Loyd's mother, and all of the available test and diagnostic data.
Dr. Honor reported that the tests he performed indicated somatic
delusions, disordered thinking, chronic psychological maladjustment
with chronic disorientation, alienation, and withdrawal. Regarding
the immediately preceding events, Dr. Honor assumed that Loyd had
been drinking, but of other drugs he discussed only biochemical
precipitators. Dr. Honor listed contributing factors: that Loyd
apparently had little sleep, had been working long hours in the
heat, had been arguing with his wife over financial difficulties,
had encountered rejection, and had been depressed. He emphasized
that no individual factor was determinative of his analysis, but
that based on all of the data he diagnosed Loyd as a borderline
psychotic with problematic personality traits of very longstanding
duration. Dr. Honor also gave substantial independent weight to
Loyd's description of events, as this description specifically
matched what is known clinically about psychotic states. Dr. Honor
testified that the information most pertinent to his diagnosis
consisted of the letters Loyd wrote and his clinical interviews of
Loyd.
Dr. Scanlon likewise gave significant weight to his interview
with Loyd. He discussed the unproven factors as being "presumed"
25
or "possible" and indicated his awareness that these factors might
not be supported by the evidence.
Dr. Sanchez stated that he did not know whether Loyd was
drugged. He recited hypothermia and fatigue as part of his factual
basis, stating that no one trigger set Loyd off; rather, the
stresses were cumulative. Both Dr. Scanlon and Dr. Sanchez
testified that in their opinion Loyd was not faking and, in fact,
that he could not fake his mental defect.
Discounting the unproven factors, the experts' fundamental
opinions are largely based on Loyd's descriptions of the crime and
on test scores and interviews. These experts, including
Dr. Sanchez, the psychiatrist first selected by the prosecution,
found that during the crime Loyd was experiencing the effects of
substantial pre-existing mental defects. The absence of this
mitigating evidence undermines our confidence in the outcome of
Loyd's penalty phase. We are charged with "assess[ing] . . . the
likelihood of a result."29 The weighing of the defendant's mental
condition was for the jury, which "must resolve differences in
opinion within the psychiatric profession on the basis of the
evidence offered by each party."30 As we noted in our earlier
opinion,31 because of counsel's inadequacy the jury could not
29
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 695.
30
Ake v. Oklahoma,
470 U.S. 68, 81 (1985).
31
See Loyd v.
Smith, 899 F.2d at 1427 (quoting
Ake, 470
U.S. at 84). We earlier quoted:
26
perform this function.
We now hold that there is enough evidence proving mental
disease and defect that the balance of aggravating and mitigating
factors in this case must be weighed by a jury in a new sentencing
hearing.
The judgment of the district court is REVERSED and judgment is
now RENDERED granting the requested writ of habeas corpus. The
case is REMANDED for entry of an appropriate judgment issuing the
Great Writ and directing the State of Louisiana, at its own option,
to sentence Loyd to life imprisonment or to retry the sentencing
phase of his trial within a reasonable period.
Without a psychiatrist's assistance, the defendant cannot
offer a well-informed expert's opposing view, and thereby
loses a significant opportunity to raise in the juror's
minds questions about the State's proof of an aggravating
factor.
470 U.S. at 84 (emphasis added).
27