Court Opinion

ID: 4681034
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-04-26 17:01:02.325946+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:03:58.738682
License: Public Domain

USCA11 Case: 16-12866     Date Filed: 04/26/2021      Page: 1 of 84

                                                                           [PUBLISH]

                 IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                          FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
                            ________________________

                                  No. 16-12866
                            ________________________

                         D.C. Docket No. 1:11-cv-01694-AT

ASKIA MUSTAFA RAHEEM,

                                                      Petitioner - Appellant,

versus

GDCP WARDEN,

                                                      Respondent - Appellee.

                            ________________________

                     Appeal from the United States District Court
                        for the Northern District of Georgia
                           ________________________

                                   (April 26, 2021)

Before JORDAN, ED CARNES and MARCUS, Circuit Judges.

MARCUS, Circuit Judge:

         In this double homicide case, Askia Mustafa Raheem was convicted of

murdering Brandon Hollis and his mother, Miriam Hollis, and sentenced to death
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by a Superior Court judge in Georgia. He urges us to overturn his convictions and

the ensuing death sentence arguing, among other things, that he received

ineffective assistance of counsel at the sentencing phase of his trial because his

lawyers failed to investigate and present to the jury additional mitigating evidence

about his mental health and social history. Alongside this claim, Raheem says the

state trial court violated procedural due process by failing to hold a hearing to

determine whether he was competent to stand trial. Because this claim was never

raised in the trial court, he attempts to overcome his default by arguing that his

counsel were ineffective in not raising the claim. He adds that regardless of the

failure to conduct a hearing, his substantive due process rights were violated

because he was in fact tried while incompetent.

      Raheem also says that his due process rights were violated when he was

forced to wear a stun belt during trial, and when the prosecutor made

impermissible arguments about his future dangerousness. Because these claims

were procedurally defaulted too, he argues again that his counsel were

prejudicially ineffective. Finally, Raheem argues that the prosecutor improperly

mentioned his failure to testify at trial, denying him the privilege against self-

incrimination afforded by the Fifth Amendment.

      The Georgia Supreme Court denied Raheem’s Fifth Amendment claim on

direct review. The state habeas court then denied on the merits Raheem’s

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ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims and found that his claims about

competency and being required to wear a stun belt were procedurally defaulted.

The denial of these claims was neither contrary to nor an unreasonable application

of clearly established law, nor was it based on an unreasonable determination of

the facts in light of the overwhelming evidence presented by the state. The district

court reviewed for the first time Raheem’s substantive due process claim. It did

not clearly err when it found that Raheem was competent to stand trial.

Accordingly, we affirm.

                                         I.

      These are the essential facts and procedural history surrounding this § 2254

petition. In the afternoon of April 2, 1999, Raheem was driving his girlfriend

Veronica Gibbs’s blue Honda in and around Clayton County, Georgia, just south

of Atlanta. He stopped to pick up his friends Michael Jenkins and Dione Feltus

from their homes. Later, he dropped Feltus off at work at five o’clock in the

afternoon. Raheem decided to go target shooting with Jenkins and another friend,

Brandon Hollis, whom Jenkins had never met. Raheem and Jenkins drove to

Gibbs’s apartment, where Raheem was living, and retrieved a .380-caliber handgun

from his bedroom. As this tragic story developed, Raheem then pulled to the side

of the road and twice fired his weapon outside the window. Raheem claimed that

he wanted to be sure the weapon would not jam.

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      On his way to pick up Brandon Hollis, Raheem stopped at a Kroger

supermarket, where he purchased a box of black trash bags. Raheem and Jenkins

picked up Brandon. They drove down a dirt road in Henry County, Georgia, some

five minutes from Brandon’s home, and they walked into the woods as it started to

get dark. Raheem shot the firearm at a tree, but missed his target. Jenkins then

took the weapon, intending to fire it. But Brandon suggested that they find another

location because the gun was “loud.” As Brandon turned and started to walk to the

car, Raheem grabbed the firearm. Raheem instructed Brandon not to walk so

quickly because he did not have a flashlight and Brandon might step in a puddle

and get mud in his girlfriend’s car. Jenkins looked down at his shoes to see if they

were muddy. When he looked up, Raheem “had the gun at the back of Brandon’s

head, and he shot him.” Brandon fell to the ground. Jenkins asked if Brandon

Hollis was dead. Raheem responded, “No, but he is on his way out.” Raheem

stopped to take Brandon’s watch, remarking, “I guess you ain’t going to be

needing this watch no more.” He also stole Brandon’s keys and his wallet. When

Raheem and Jenkins returned to the car, Raheem told his friend, “I’m glad you

didn’t run.”

      Raheem and Jenkins proceeded to Brandon Hollis’s home. Raheem used

Brandon’s keys to open the door. Before entering, Raheem told Jenkins to bring a

trash bag into the house. When they walked in, Brandon’s mother, Miriam Hollis,

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was sitting in a chair reading a book. As Raheem entered brandishing the firearm,

Miriam jumped up. Raheem fired at her and jumped behind a wall. Raheem

yelled, “Get down, this is a robbery.” As Miriam started to lie down on the floor

on the other side of the chair, Raheem reached over the chair and shot her. Miriam

Hollis fell, blood seeping out of her head onto the carpet. Jenkins handed the

garbage bag to Raheem, who placed it over her head to contain the flow of the

blood. After making sure no one else was in the house, Raheem grabbed the keys

to Miriam’s Lexus. Raheem explained that he killed Miriam Hollis because he had

paid her $8,000 for the Lexus and she refused to give him the car. Raheem popped

the trunk of the Lexus, and he and Jenkins placed Miriam’s body inside. Raheem

tried to clean the blood off the carpet with a mop.

      Later, Raheem and Jenkins visited Raheem’s girlfriend, Veronica Gibbs, at a

B.P. gas station where she worked. Raheem brought Gibbs outside the station,

popped the trunk of the Lexus, and showed her Miriam’s body. Raheem and

Jenkins then went to eat at a Wendy’s, but Jenkins could not keep any food down.

The two rode around in Miriam’s Lexus until midnight and then picked up Gibbs

from work. She, Raheem, and Jenkins drove back to the Hollis home in the Lexus.

Gibbs and Raheem proceeded to burglarize the house.

      At around 4 a.m., Raheem and Jenkins disposed of Miriam’s body. They

drove to some train tracks and took her body out of the trunk. Raheem dragged the

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body along the tracks. They covered Miriam Hollis with wood and debris.

Raheem said he wanted to burn the body, but Jenkins advised against it.

Nevertheless, Raheem doused Miriam’s body with alcohol or gasoline -- Jenkins

was not sure which -- struck a match, and set the body ablaze. The two of them

then drove back to Gibbs’s house and went to sleep. A few days later, Raheem

gave the firearm to a friend (Tamika Woods), asking her to hide it. She threw the

weapon into a sewer, where it was later recovered by the police.

      Raheem was indicted in Henry County, Georgia on two counts of malice

murder, four counts of felony murder (each of the murders were committed in the

course of an aggravated assault and both were committed with firearms while

Raheem was a felon in possession of a firearm), two counts of armed robbery, and

one count of burglary. See Ga. Code Ann. §§ 16-5-1(a), (c), 16-7-1(a), 16-8-41(a)

(1999). During the guilt phase of Raheem’s trial, the state presented extensive

evidence of the brutal crimes, much of it from the testimony of Michael Jenkins.

Veronica Gibbs and Dione Feltus testified that Raheem had confessed to

murdering both Brandon and Miriam Hollis, and Gibbs confirmed that Raheem

had shown her Miriam’s body in the trunk of the Lexus on the night of the

murders.

      The prosecution also called a number of police officers, crime scene

investigators, and forensic analysts to corroborate the lay witnesses’ accounts.

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Among other things, the state presented evidence that Brandon and Miriam Hollis

were both killed by gunshot wounds to their heads, that the firearm used in the

crimes was the one Woods had dumped in the sewer, that a box and ammunition

for the type of handgun used in the murders was found in Raheem’s bedroom in

Gibbs’s apartment, and that DNA from Brandon and Miriam Hollis was found in

blood on shoes known to be worn by Raheem. The state further introduced

evidence that missing items from the Hollis home (including Miriam Hollis’s

checkbook) were found in Gibbs’s apartment, that Miriam Hollis’s stolen Lexus

was found within walking distance of Gibbs’s apartment, and that Miriam Hollis’s

burned body was discovered at the railroad tracks across the street from the home

of Raheem’s cousin.

      In addition, the prosecution introduced a videotape of an interview

conducted on April 6, 1999, between Raheem and the police. Raheem described

substantially the same chain of events that Jenkins had recounted, but, notably,

Raheem claimed that Jenkins was the shooter. Detective Renee Swanson testified

that after Raheem made the videotaped statement, he took her to the location of

Brandon’s body in the woods. The jury convicted Raheem on all counts.

      At the penalty phase, the prosecution called a number of jail officers who

testified about various contraband items that had been found in Raheem’s

possession at the jail. The defense offered mental health experts Dr. Charles Nord

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and Dr. Jack Farrar in mitigation. Farrar had testified on Raheem’s behalf at the

guilt phase as well. Raheem’s father, Askia Raheem, and his mother, Elaine

Raheem, also gave testimony on behalf of their son. The jury unanimously

recommended that Raheem be sentenced to die for the malice murder of Miriam

Hollis. On each remaining murder count, the jury recommended life in prison

without parole. The trial judge sentenced Raheem to death for the malice murder

of Miriam Hollis, to life in prison for the remaining murder counts and the armed

robbery counts, and to twenty years in prison for the burglary count, all sentences

to run consecutively to one another.

       Raheem directly appealed to the Georgia Supreme Court. Georgia’s high

court affirmed his convictions and the ensuing sentences on March 11, 2002.

Raheem v. State, 560 S.E.2d 680 (Ga.), cert. denied, Raheem v. Georgia, 537 U.S.

1021 (2002), reh’g denied, 537 U.S. 1150 (2003). 1 Relevant for our purposes, the

Georgia Supreme Court considered Raheem’s claim that his Fifth Amendment

right had been violated when the prosecutor commented, in closing argument, that

Raheem had failed to testify at trial. Id. at 685. The Georgia Supreme Court

concluded that although his constitutional right had been violated, the error was

1
 The court noted that “[t]he trial court properly vacated the felony murder convictions [as
duplicative] and imposed the jury’s sentences for the malice murders.” Id. at 682 n.1 (citing
Malcolm v. State, 434 S.E.2d 479, 482 (Ga. 1993); Ga. Code Ann. § 16–1–7(a)(1)).
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harmless beyond a reasonable doubt under Chapman v. California, 386 U.S. 18

(1967). Id.

      Raheem first collaterally attacked his convictions in Butts County, Georgia.

The state habeas court conducted an extensive evidentiary hearing in late January

2008. Raheem offered additional mental health evidence. First, Dr. Ruben Gur

testified. Another defense expert, Dr. James Evans, presented an affidavit and the

test results from his examination of Raheem. Additional affidavits were offered

from other mental health experts who had consulted with the defense team before

the trial: Dr. Jack Farrar (the primary mental health expert who aided the defense),

Dr. Charles Nord, and Dr. Dennis Herendeen. Raheem’s habeas counsel also

presented a supplemental affidavit from Dr. Melissa Carran. In rebuttal, the state

called its own mental health expert, Dr. Daniel Martell. The state habeas court

took live testimony from Raheem’s trial lawyers -- Gregory Futch and Wade

Crumbley -- as well as from the state’s chief investigator, Renee Swanson, and

from the district attorney who prosecuted Raheem, Tommy Floyd. Finally, the

court reviewed affidavits offered by Raheem’s family members and friends.

      On February 13, 2009, the Superior Court judge denied Raheem’s petition,

adopting nearly verbatim a 106-page proposed order submitted by the state. In

relevant part, the state habeas court determined that defense counsel were not

deficient in investigating or preparing for the guilt or penalty phases of his trial,

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nor was Raheem prejudiced by counsel’s performance. The court found that trial

counsel had “conducted a thorough investigation” into the available mitigation

evidence and “developed a reasonable strategy of mitigation.” It concluded that

“while there is some evidence [in the postconviction record] that Petitioner’s brain

does not function normally, contrary to Petitioner’s assertions, there is not

consensus as to what that actually means and what, if any, affect [sic] that has on

Petitioner’s behavior on the night of the crime, nor its influence on the decision of

the jury.” The state court also rejected the claim that defense counsel were

ineffective for not offering the additional theory that Raheem suffers from some

kind of seizure disorder. The court observed that multiple mental health experts

did not discern any evidence of the disorder. Nor was the proffered evidence

conclusive. Finally, the state habeas court rejected Raheem’s claims about the use

of a stun belt at trial, again finding no deficient performance nor any prejudice.

      The Georgia Supreme Court summarily denied Raheem’s application for a

certificate of probable cause to appeal the denial of his habeas petition, and, on

May 23, 2011, the Supreme Court denied his petition for writ of certiorari.

Raheem v. Hall, 563 U.S. 1010 (2011).

      The next day, Raheem turned his sights on the federal district court, filing

this § 2254 petition in the United States District Court for the Northern District of

Georgia, raising many of the same claims. Applying the deference mandated by

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the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), 28 U.S.C. §

2254(d), the district court concluded that none of the state court’s findings were

contrary to or an unreasonable application of clearly established Supreme Court

law, nor were they the product of unreasonable determinations of fact in light of

the evidence presented.

      The district court reviewed de novo one remaining claim -- that Raheem was

not competent to stand trial. First, the district court determined that Raheem was

not entitled to an evidentiary hearing on the claim, pursuant to 28 U.S.C.

§ 2254(e)(2). Then, after examining all of the evidence placed in the record, it

concluded that Raheem was competent to stand trial.

      The district court granted a certificate of appealability (“COA”) on these

issues:

      1. Ineffective assistance of counsel at the penalty phase of his capital
         trial by his counsel unreasonably failing to investigate and present
         evidence of Raheem’s mitigating background and brain damage.

      2. Violation of his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-
         incrimination when the prosecutor commented, during closing
         arguments, on Raheem’s failure to testify.

      3. Ineffective assistance of counsel in failing to object to the
         prosecutor’s invoking his own expertise, injecting non-record
         evidence into the proceedings, and telling the jurors that petitioner
         would kill them if he was not sentenced to death.

      4. Raheem was incompetent to stand trial, the trial court failed to hold
         a competency hearing, and counsel were prejudicially ineffective for
         failing to raise the claim at trial or on direct appeal.
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       5. Prosecutorial misconduct deprived Raheem of due process and a fair
          trial, specifically through the prosecutor presenting false testimony
          and withholding Brady evidence at the guilt and penalty phases.2

       This Court granted in part a motion to expand the COA, adding one issue:

       Whether the district court erred in denying Appellant’s Sixth
       Amendment claim that his trial counsel unreasonably, prejudicially,
       and falsely showed and told the jurors that Petitioner was dangerous.

                                              II.

       We review de novo a district court’s denial of a habeas corpus petition.

McNair v. Campbell, 416 F.3d 1291, 1297 (11th Cir. 2005). Because Raheem

filed his federal habeas petition after April 24, 1996, this case is governed by

AEDPA.3 “Under AEDPA, if a state court has adjudicated the merits of a claim --

as the state court did here -- we cannot grant habeas relief unless the state court’s

decision ‘was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly

established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States,’

2
  Although this claim was included in the COA, Raheem never argued it on appeal and,
therefore, it has been abandoned. Isaacs v. Head, 300 F.3d 1232, 1238 (11th Cir. 2002).
3
  As for Raheem’s claim that AEDPA deference does not apply to the state habeas court order
because the court ignored the evidence he presented, he is mistaken. In the cases Raheem relies
on, the courts began their analyses with AEDPA deference -- not de novo review -- and only
later concluded that the state court had “unreasonably” ignored or discounted evidence. See
Porter v. McCollum, 558 U.S. 30, 42–44 (2009); Guzman v. Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr., 663 F.3d
1336, 1351–52 & 1347 n.13 (11th Cir. 2011); see also Cooper v. Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr., 646 F.3d
1328, 1353 (11th Cir. 2011) (noting that “we do not owe the state court’s findings deference
under AEDPA,” and apply a de novo standard of review, only when we first find that “a state
court unreasonably determines the facts relevant to a claim”) (quotations omitted, emphasis
added). In this case, the state court did not unreasonably determine the facts.
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or ‘was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the

evidence presented in the State court proceeding.’” Kilgore v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of

Corr., 805 F.3d 1301, 1309 (11th Cir. 2015) (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)).

      “Under § 2254(d)(1)’s ‘contrary to’ clause, we grant relief only ‘if the state

court arrives at a conclusion opposite to that reached by [the Supreme] Court on a

question of law or if the state court decides a case differently than [the Supreme

Court] has on a set of materially indistinguishable facts.’” Jones v. GDCP

Warden, 753 F.3d 1171, 1182 (11th Cir. 2014) (alterations in original) (quoting

Williams v. Taylor, 529 U.S. 362, 413 (2000)). “Under § 2254(d)(1)’s

‘unreasonable application’ clause, we grant relief only ‘if the state court identifies

the correct governing legal principle from [the Supreme] Court’s decisions but

unreasonably applies that principle to the facts of the prisoner’s case.’” Id.

(alteration in original) (quoting Williams, 529 U.S. at 413).

      The second prong of § 2254(d) -- that an adjudication resulted in a decision

that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the

evidence presented in the state-court proceeding -- also “requires that we accord

the state trial court substantial deference.” Brumfield v. Cain, 576 U.S. 305, 314

(2015). “If ‘[r]easonable minds reviewing the record might disagree’ about the

finding in question, ‘on habeas review that does not suffice to supersede the trial

court’s . . . determination.’” Id. (alteration and ellipsis in original) (quoting Wood

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v. Allen, 558 U.S. 290, 301 (2010)). In addition, on AEDPA review, “a

determination of a factual issue made by a State court shall be presumed to be

correct” -- a presumption the petitioner has the burden of rebutting “by clear and

convincing evidence.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1).4 “Clear and convincing evidence

is a demanding but not insatiable standard, requiring proof that a claim is highly

probable.” Nejad v. Att’y Gen., State of Ga., 830 F.3d 1280, 1289 (11th Cir. 2016)

(quotations omitted). “Highly probable is a standard that requires more than a

preponderance of the evidence but less than proof beyond a reasonable doubt.” Id.

(quotations omitted, alteration adopted).

       As for Raheem’s substantive competency claim, we review the district

court’s factual findings for clear error, and its legal conclusions de novo. See

Lawrence v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 700 F.3d 464, 481 (11th Cir. 2012) (setting

forth the standard for a substantive competency claim raised on federal habeas and

reviewed by the district court de novo, and noting that the petitioner “has not met

that high burden, especially because he must show that the district court’s finding

that [petitioner] was competent was not just wrong, but clearly erroneous”). “A

finding is ‘clearly erroneous’ when although there is evidence to support it, the

reviewing court on the entire evidence is left with the definite and firm conviction

4
 “The Supreme Court has not yet defined § 2254(d)(2)’s ‘precise relationship’ to § 2254(e)(1),”
and we need not do so here. Tharpe v. Warden, 834 F.3d 1323, 1337 (11th Cir. 2016) (quoting
Burt v. Titlow, 571 U.S. 12, 18 (2013)).
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that a mistake has been committed.” Jenkins v. Comm’r, Ala. Dep’t of Corr., 963

F.3d 1248, 1264 (11th Cir. 2020) (quoting United States v. U.S. Gypsum Co., 333

U.S. 364, 395 (1948)).

                                         III.

      The main thrust of Raheem’s arguments on appeal is that his trial attorneys

were prejudicially ineffective by failing to further investigate and present to the

jury evidence of his mental illness, cognitive deficits, and brain damage, and by

failing to investigate and present evidence of additional mitigating family

background and social history. The state habeas court disagreed. So do we. The

state court’s rejection of these claims was neither contrary to nor an unreasonable

application of clearly established Supreme Court law, nor was it based on an

unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented.

      To successfully show ineffective assistance of counsel, Raheem must

establish that counsels’ performance was constitutionally deficient -- that his

counsel “made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the ‘counsel’

guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment” -- and that the deficient

performance prejudiced the defendant, depriving him of a “fair trial, a trial whose

result is reliable.” Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984). In other

words, Raheem must show that: (1) “counsel’s representation fell below an

objective standard of reasonableness,” and (2) “there is a reasonable probability

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that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would

have been different.” Id. at 688, 694; accord Knowles v. Mirzayance, 556 U.S.

111, 124 (2009); Wiggins v. Smith, 539 U.S. 510, 521 (2003); Williams, 529 U.S.

at 390; Darden v. Wainwright, 477 U.S. 168, 184 (1986). The failure to meet

either Strickland prong is fatal to the claim. Strickland, 466 U.S. at 700.

      As for the first prong -- counsel’s performance -- “[j]udicial scrutiny . . .

must be highly deferential.” Id. at 689. We apply a “strong presumption” that

counsel performed competently and ask only whether any “identified acts or

omissions were outside the wide range of professionally competent assistance.” Id.

at 689–90. And our review under AEDPA is doubly deferential: we extend

deference both to the trial counsel’s choices and to the state court’s assessment of

their reasonableness. Harrington v. Richter, 562 U.S. 86, 105 (2011). Harrington

therefore affords “double deference to the state court ruling on counsel’s

performance.” Daniel v. Comm’r, Ala. Dep’t of Corr., 822 F.3d 1248, 1262 (11th

Cir. 2016). “The pivotal question is whether the state court’s application of the

Strickland standard was unreasonable[,]” which “is different from asking whether

defense counsel’s performance fell below Strickland’s standard.” Harrington, 562

U.S. at 101.

      Indeed, “evaluating whether a rule application was unreasonable requires

considering the rule’s specificity. The more general the rule, the more leeway

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courts have in reaching outcomes in case-by-case determinations.” Yarborough v.

Alvarado, 541 U.S. 652, 664 (2004). Just as Strickland allows for a range of

strategic choices by trial counsel, so too is there considerable latitude for state

courts to determine the reasonableness of those choices. See Shinn v. Kayer, 141

S. Ct. 517, 523 (2020). Accordingly, “[a] state court’s determination that a claim

lacks merit precludes federal habeas relief so long as ‘fairminded jurists could

disagree’ on the correctness of the state court’s decision.” Harrington, 562 U.S. at

101 (quoting Yarborough, 541 U.S. at 664). For Raheem to prevail, then, he

would have to show that no reasonable jurist could find that his counsel’s

performance fell within the wide range of reasonable professional conduct.

      In addition, it is well established that counsel’s obligation to render

competent performance includes “a duty to make reasonable investigations” of

potential mitigating evidence “or to make a reasonable decision that makes

particular investigations unnecessary.” Wiggins, 539 U.S. at 521 (quoting

Strickland, 466 U.S. at 691). In any ineffectiveness case, an attorney’s “decision

not to investigate must be directly assessed for reasonableness in all the

circumstances, applying a heavy measure of deference to counsel’s judgments.”

Id. at 521–22 (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 691). But counsel’s duty to

investigate “does not necessarily require counsel to investigate every evidentiary

lead.” Williams v. Allen, 542 F.3d 1326, 1337 (11th Cir. 2008). “Under

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Strickland, strategic choices made after less than complete investigation are

reasonable precisely to the extent that reasonable professional judgments support

the limitations on investigation.” Id. (quotations and citations omitted); compare

Strickland, 466 U.S. at 699 (stating that counsel’s “decision not to seek more

character or psychological evidence than was already in hand was . . . reasonable”),

with Porter, 558 U.S. at 40 (noting that counsel “failed to uncover and present any

evidence of [the petitioner’s] mental health or mental impairment, his family

background, or his military service,” and “[t]he decision not to investigate did not

reflect reasonable professional judgment”).

                                         A.

                                         1.

      We begin by painting a full picture of trial counsel’s extensive investigation

of the available mitigating evidence and the presentation of this evidence to the

jury. Raheem’s lawyers, Wade Crumbley and Gregory Futch, aided in the

investigation by attorney Tom Carr, were experienced trial attorneys who each had

some familiarity with death penalty cases. “When courts are examining the

performance of an experienced trial counsel, the presumption that his conduct was

reasonable is even stronger.” Chandler v. United States, 218 F.3d 1305, 1316

(11th Cir. 2000) (en banc); see also Spaziano v. Singletary, 36 F.3d 1028, 1040

(11th Cir. 1994) (“[T]he more experienced an attorney is, the more likely it is that

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his decision to rely on his own experience and judgment in rejecting a defense

without substantial investigation was reasonable under the circumstances.”)

(quotations omitted).

      Futch and Crumbley had each been practicing law for over fifteen years.

Crumbley had worked on five death penalty cases and investigated or supervised

investigations in each one, though he had never tried a death penalty case. He had

also defended a number of non-capital murder trials, and had experience handling

habeas cases. Futch had worked as an assistant district attorney and in private

practice doing criminal defense, and had handled over one hundred felony trials,

including “several murder cases,” and “countless misdemeanors.” Futch had also

handled two death penalty cases -- one as a prosecutor and one as a defense

attorney.

      When defense counsel were appointed in July 1999, they quickly began

investigating Raheem’s background and mental health. Crumbley testified that he

and Futch “tried to get all of the records we could from his educational past, his

medical past, and his counseling past,” in addition to his prison records; “[w]e got

every kind of record we could think of.” Crumbley added that he “tried to find

every member of his family [he] could, to see if they were willing to cooperate.”

Crumbley also “tried to go back and . . . interview or at least talk to all of the

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mental health professionals and counselors who had talked to [Raheem] in the

past,” and “[s]ome of those people became part of the defense team.”

      To learn about Raheem’s family life, counsel met with Raheem’s father,

Askia, his mother, Elaine, his sister, Jameelah, his grandfather, and other family

members on multiple occasions. Crumbley testified that Raheem’s family

“indicated willingness to do anything they could to try to help save him.”

Crumbley talked “at length” with Raheem’s parents about “everywhere he’d been

to school, everywhere he’d ever been to the doctor, everywhere he’d ever been for

counseling.” At one point a few months after an initial appointment, trial counsel

spoke with Raheem’s father Askia because they were concerned about Raheem’s

“apparent lack of concern.” Askia said that he and Elaine had “always been

concerned [and] tried to help him.”

      During their meetings, Askia told counsel about several troubling instances

when Raheem was growing up. First, Askia recounted that when Raheem was in

kindergarten, he left school and caught a bus that took him downtown. When he

arrived downtown, he told people that he was from out of state and needed to get

home. Counsel further learned from Askia that Raheem shot himself in the leg

about three years before murdering Brandon and his mother. Raheem claimed that

someone jumped him and shot him. Askia added that several times Raheem took a

loaded nine-millimeter gun to school on the bus, carried the weapon around other

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children, stole money from a safe and then came up with “tall tales.” Askia,

Elaine, and Jameelah said that as a child, Raheem had injured his head on three

occasions. His family also reported that he had “always been strange,” had

“multiple personalities,” and described him as “kindhearted but careless [and]

heartless.” Raheem’s paternal aunt offered that Raheem’s behavior changed from

a “respectful, loving child” to having “a love of guns [and] violence” when he was

about twelve. Family members also told counsel that he had attempted suicide

three or four times.

      Trial counsel generally were aware that Raheem’s mother Elaine had been

ill, and Raheem’s medical records reported that Elaine had a “history of

depression.” Counsel also knew that Raheem had attempted suicide after his

mother’s mental breakdown. The defense lawyers further learned that Askia had

resisted the treatments doctors recommended for Raheem when he was

hospitalized following that suicide attempt. Elaine explained that Askia had

“faded out of the picture after the marriage broke down.”

      At the same time counsel were gathering information about Raheem’s

family life and upbringing, they also undertook an investigation into his mental

health and medical history. As early as October 1999 -- some fifteen months

before trial -- counsel met with their first mental health expert, licensed

psychologist Dr. Jack Farrar, who had treated Raheem after a suicide attempt at

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age fifteen. Before Raheem’s trial, Farrar met with him “on many occasions” and

told counsel that, based on these interactions, he “believed that there was some sort

of abnormality with [Raheem’s] brain.” Farrar recommended that defense counsel

retain a neuropsychiatrist to do a full battery of neuropsychological testing. Acting

upon this recommendation, in April 2000, counsel sought and obtained funds from

the trial court to retain Dr. Jeffrey Klopper, a neurologist and psychiatrist, whom

Farrar described as an “ideal candidate” to conduct further investigation. In

August 2000, Klopper met with Raheem and evaluated him.

      Around the same time, Dr. Dennis Herendeen, still another licensed

psychologist retained by defense counsel, met with Raheem and administered

several tests designed to reveal evidence of organic brain damage. Dr. Herendeen

used the Kaufman Short Neuropsychological Assessment Procedure (“K-SNAP”),

which tests five or six areas of brain function; an Aphasia Screening Test, which

“looks for impairment in language” -- namely, the “ability to understand what

people are saying” and express oneself through language and writing; and the Trail

Making Test, Parts A and B. In addition, defense counsel contacted yet another

licensed psychologist, Dr. Charles Nord, who had performed tests on Raheem’s

brain functioning when he was fifteen years old at Charter Peachford Hospital.

They asked Nord to “express an opinion” about whether these tests suggested

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neurological damage. Herendeen and Nord both conducted the Bender-Gestalt

test, which assesses cognitive development and screens for brain damage.

      After the testing and evaluations were completed, about two months before

trial, defense counsel spoke with Drs. Klopper and Farrar, who informed them that

Klopper and Herendeen had not found evidence that Raheem suffered from brain

damage. Rather, the doctors suggested that, in order to look further for evidence of

brain damage, Raheem should take a magnetic resonance imaging (“MRI”) scan

and then a positron emission tomography (“PET”) scan. Counsel’s

contemporaneous notes indicated that an MRI was needed to “check for possible

brain lessions [sic],” which could cause Raheem’s impulsivity and could affect

“the ability to distinguish between right [and] wrong.” These notes also mentioned

the possibility of a bipolar disorder diagnosis and the possible need for a

quantitative electroencephalogram (“EEG”), though there is no testimony that this

test was ever recommended. Klopper admitted to counsel that it was unlikely the

MRI and PET scan would show anything further, but counsel “thought [they]

needed to do it anyway and not rely solely on that.”

      Defense counsel again sought funds from the trial court and scheduled an

MRI and a PET scan. At the collateral hearing, counsel told the judge that they

were looking for evidence of organic brain damage: “[Dr. Klopper] and Dr. Farrar

have consulted and the feeling is that there is a need to have a diagnostic test done,

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which is referred to as a PET scan . . . of Mr. Raheem’s brain, to determine

whether there is any evidence of brain damage or of impaired functions of certain

parts of the brain which might be attributable to head trauma in his past and which

might in some way have a causal link with some of the psychiatric problems that

he’s experienced.”

      The MRI was performed on January 19, 2001, at Henry Medical Center.

The interpreting physician concluded his report with the overall impression that

Raheem had a “normal brain MRI with no evidence of acute intracranial injury.”

Thereafter, Dr. Klopper ordered the PET scan to be conducted at Emory Hospital,

noting on the order forms that the “[p]atient has history of major depression,

suicide attempts, and delusional thought processes. History also indicates

childhood head trauma. Rule out functional abnormality.” The PET scan was

scheduled at Emory for 11:30 a.m. on February 6, 2001, during voir dire. That

day, however, Raheem refused to get out of the transport at Emory to have the PET

scan done. Crumbley unequivocally testified at the state postconviction hearing

that aside from the PET scan, there were no “evaluations or tests that the mental

health experts told [counsel] needed to be done that [counsel] did not do.”

      By the time of trial, all four of defense counsel’s mental health experts had

performed testing, Raheem had undergone an MRI, and the experts had analyzed

the results of the tests. All four experts and their testing and reports indicated that

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the doctors had nothing helpful to offer the defense about organic brain damage.

At that point, according to Crumbley, the defense team chose to forego Klopper’s

testimony because he would have testified that he found no evidence of organic

brain damage and because he was “very skeptical” that the MRI or PET scan

would have revealed anything. Counsel did, however, call Drs. Farrar and Nord to

testify on Raheem’s behalf.

       During the guilt phase of the trial, defense counsel called Dr. Farrar, who

testified extensively about Raheem’s serious mental illnesses -- including major

depressive disorder, multiple suicide attempts, borderline personality disorder, and

narcissistic and antisocial features -- largely in support of a theory that Raheem had

falsely confessed to the crimes due to his mental health problems. 5 Farrar told the

jury he first met Raheem at Fairview Day Hospital in August 1994 after Raheem

had attempted suicide at age fifteen and had been released from Dr. Nord’s care at

Charter Peachford Hospital. Dr. Farrar described Raheem’s program at Fairview

as “a very intense outpatient hospital program,” that Raheem attended instead of

school. Farrar summarized the psychological tests he had performed in 1994, and

noted that Dr. Nord had administered similar tests around that time.

5
 When asked to clarify at trial the relevance of Farrar’s testimony to the guilt phase, Crumbley
explained that “[t]he theory of relevance of this testimony is purely that there has been evidence
presented that [Raheem] made statements to various people about his involvement in these
crimes. And we think that it is relevant on the issue of whether the jury ought to believe that or
not. And that is our sole theory of relevance here.”
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      Dr. Farrar retested Raheem about five years later, after his arrest for the

murders, and found that the results were “extremely parallel, almost identical over

time” and the “personality problems were almost exactly the same.” Farrar

described Raheem as “a young man that is very, very depressed,” and who exhibits

“a great deal of suspiciousness and paranoia,” including “hypervigilance.” Farrar

added that individuals like Raheem with borderline personality disorder sometimes

“push themselves away” from others, and when they do so, “they get real angry

and sometimes real verbally hostile or get the other person to be verbally hostile

with them.”

      According to Farrar, Raheem’s personality disorder also led him to tell

stories, including his involvement in committing crimes. Farrar told the jury that

Raheem “is so depressed, so much dislikes himself, that he attempts to get people

to take him on, to beat him up,” by exhibiting a “real false bravado.” Farrar said:

      He puts out this persona, or this kind of image of himself, that he wants
      people to buy that is supposed to be scary, that is supposed to be
      frightening. And he tries to make people back off. And so he tries to
      control situations by being outlandish, by developing these crazy, often
      times frightening stories and often times admitting to crimes which I
      don’t believe he has conducted or he has done to feel bigger than he is.

When asked by Raheem’s counsel whether it was plausible that Raheem would

falsely admit to his girlfriend that he had committed a murder that he did not in

fact commit, Farrar responded, “Oh, absolutely. That is part of his modus operandi,

yes. Exactly.” Finally, Raheem’s counsel asked whether there was a delusional
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component to Raheem’s mental illness, which Farrar confirmed: Raheem “has a

whole world that sounds delusional [if] you listen to it. He calls it the place that he

goes to.”

      During the penalty phase of Raheem’s trial, defense counsel called both Drs.

Nord and Farrar. Dr. Nord, who had treated Raheem at Charter Peachford Hospital

after his 1994 suicide attempt, had diagnosed Raheem with major depression and

oppositional defiance disorder. Nord’s impression of Raheem at fifteen was of a

deeply troubled young man: “[Raheem] is a young man at risk. He’s depressed,

continues to have suicidal ideation, gets disorganized easily and is quite impulsive.

At times he doesn’t care what happens to him. He will continue to be at risk until

one gets control of his depression, agitation, and suicidal ideation.”

      Nord testified that he evaluated Raheem again in January 2001, in

preparation for trial. Nord told the jury that Raheem’s mental illness had worsened

since 1994; he was still depressed, but by 2001 he showed “borderline personality

characteristics, because he would dissociate, he would go into himself.” He was

“more distant and distractible,” and would “zone out and move into another world,

which he had control of.” Nord explained that “borderline” means “he’s on the

verge of becoming more psychotic [meaning he hallucinates], but he’s still within

some range of reason.” Raheem felt he could “disappear into that world,” which

he found comforting.

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       On cross-examination, Nord agreed that Raheem’s other world was like a

“daydream” or a “fantasy world,” and that most people in jail charged with crimes

are depressed. The state pressed Nord on his oppositional defiance disorder

diagnosis, asking, “That’s pretty self-descriptive, isn’t it? He’s defiant of

authority?” Nord replied, “Yes. He had a lot of issues with authority.” When

Nord told the prosecutor he had not observed vindictiveness in Raheem, the

prosecutor asked if Nord was aware that Raheem had threatened to kick a jailer in

the “rear end” and had threatened to kill the prosecutor and his own girlfriend for

their roles in the trial.

       The defense recalled Dr. Farrar at the sentencing phase. Farrar testified that

he’d been deeply frustrated when the managed care company stopped paying for

Raheem’s treatment at Fairview Day Hospital back in 1994, and he even insisted

that the clinic start treating Raheem for free, because Raheem was still suicidal and

had “severe problems” the clinic could address. Nevertheless, Raheem’s treatment

was curtailed and the clinic discharged him. Farrar told the jury that Raheem

wanted to die, that he “just doesn’t want to live, hasn’t wanted to live for a very

long time.” Farrar opined that if Raheem could have stayed at the center for

further treatment, “we would have gotten this young man well.” Farrar added that

although Raheem played the “tough guy,” he had a softer side, a concern for other

people, and an ability to attach to people.

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      The defense also called Raheem’s father, Askia, and his mother, Elaine, to

testify at the sentencing phase. Notably, Raheem initially had barred counsel from

putting his parents on the stand. And Raheem never allowed counsel to call his

sister. According to Raheem’s counsel, Raheem “put some restrictions on me as to

who I could call and what I could ask at the sentencing phase,” and “limited me

severely in what I was able to present.” Only after “a lot of begging” and

persuading members of the press not to film Raheem’s relatives did Raheem agree

to let Crumbley call his parents to testify.

      While on the stand, Askia expressed how sad he was about the crimes his

son committed, adding that he loved his son and did not want him to die. He

agreed with Dr. Farrar that Raheem wanted to die and said that although he had

“given a lot of thought about this,” he did not know why. He relayed that he and

his wife had been separated for about three years. When prompted by counsel to

“tell the [j]ury something good about” Raheem, Askia recounted a time when he

had a cat and Raheem fought him “harder than anything” about keeping the cat in

the garage rather than outside. He also said that Raheem could not stand to see

him hit a squirrel in the road. He testified, “I can’t remember him talking back to

me. That’s the truth. . . . I don’t ever remember him having an act of violence

against anybody.”

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      Askia also described the incident when five- or six-year-old Raheem had

boarded a city bus instead of going home from school, and how a bus driver had

informed Askia that they were holding a boy at the transit center who claimed to

have caught a bus from out of state. It was at that time that Askia first noticed

“something wasn’t quite right” with his son. On cross-examination, the prosecutor

brought out that Askia had lived in the home with Elaine during “most of

[Raheem’s] life,” but Askia noted that Raheem left home when he was about

fifteen or sixteen and Askia “sort of lost track of him” after that.

      Raheem’s mother Elaine testified next. During her testimony, she became

emotional, which prompted Raheem to yell at her in an attempt to get her to step

down. When Elaine regained her composure, she testified that the crimes were

extremely unlike Raheem, that he had always been well-mannered to her, had

never raised a hand against her, and had never used profanity. She said that

Raheem had helped her whenever she was sick, cooking for her and driving her.

When he was a child, he had always been “very loving, very loving, even more

loving than my daughter was.” Elaine was shocked that Raheem would have

committed the crimes he was charged with. After Elaine finished testifying,

Crumbley asked all of Raheem’s family members in the courtroom to stand up so

the jury could see them.

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      In closing argument at the penalty phase, Raheem’s counsel expressly

argued that the unrebutted testimony of Drs. Nord and Farrar established that

Raheem was mentally ill and that the jury should consider this as a mitigating

factor. Counsel conceded that Raheem was not incompetent or insane, but said he

was “not as blameworthy as a normal person who was not mentally ill, who had

committed these same crimes. Sometimes his thinking is delusional and confused.

Sometimes he believes things that aren’t real. And a lot of times he hates himself

so much that he wants to die.” Counsel noted that Raheem had never gotten the

mental help he needed because his insurance would not cover it. Counsel urged

that Raheem had “good in him,” was “capable of concern for others,” and could

potentially get the medical help he needed in prison. Finally, counsel pleaded with

the jury to sentence Raheem to life in prison without the possibility of parole rather

than to death.

                                          2.

      At the state postconviction hearing, Raheem’s counsel presented newly

obtained evidence of mental illness in order to challenge his trial counsel’s

performance. The strongest opinion testimony came from Dr. Ruben Gur, a

neuropsychologist and professor at the University of Pennsylvania, who testified in

part based on a battery of neurophysical tests he conducted. He also reviewed the

testing done by Drs. Farrar, Herendeen, and Nord, as well as MRI data collected by

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a radiologist in 2006, and neuropsychological testing performed by another defense

expert, Dr. James Evans, in 2005.

      Analyzing the MRI data, Dr. Gur opined that Raheem’s temporal lobe

exhibited severe abnormality. His left hippocampus was between two and two-

and-a-half standard deviations smaller than normal, and his amygdala was between

three and four standard deviations smaller than normal. His whole frontal lobe was

“reduced in volume.” Notably, however, this MRI data had produced a normal

initial reading. Only in later analysis of the MRI did Gur uncover evidence of

brain damage, contrary to the reading he’d done using the visual image produced

by the MRI. Gur explained that this could happen with MRI images of diffuse

brain abnormalities. Gur opined that Raheem’s brain deficits could have affected

his culpability for the crimes and his competence at trial because they impaired his

“ability to correctly perceive events, interpret events, exercise suitable judgment,

and to plan and respond appropriately.” He also concluded that “Raheem suffers

from schizophrenia or schizophrenic-like psychosis, which results in distorted

perceptions of reality and renders him incapable of interpreting and responding

appropriately to the world around him.”

      Another expert, Dr. Evans, performed postconviction neuropsychological

testing on Raheem and submitted an affidavit agreeing that Raheem suffers from

brain damage. Evans opined that the neuropsychological testing he performed in

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May 2005 showed “clear indications of brain damage/dysfunction,” that his testing

was “indicative of rather widespread cortical dysfunction, probably greatest in

temporal areas.”

      Drs. Herendeen and Nord also offered postconviction affidavits, in which

they claimed that their pretrial and 1994 results were “consistent” with a finding of

organic brain damage. Herendeen noted: “When screening tests produce results

consistent with organic brain damage, usually a full neuropsychological battery is

then administered by a neuropsychologist, not a psychologist.” Yet Herendeen did

not say he recommended further testing to Raheem’s counsel before trial. Indeed,

defense counsel’s notes from a December 4, 2000 meeting indicate that Herendeen

had gone to see Raheem the day before “according to [Farrar]” and that “[Farrar]

didn’t think that [Herendeen] found anything to help [the defense].” As for Nord,

he claimed in his postconviction affidavit that his 1994 tests were consistent with

brain damage, but he never mentioned brain damage at Raheem’s trial, where he

admittedly “testified regarding [his] impressions” of Raheem. Rather, Dr. Nord’s

trial testimony reflected his opinion that Raheem was depressed and showed

characteristics of borderline personality disorder. Moreover, Nord’s 1994

psychological report does not make any mention of brain damage.

      The state’s mental health expert, Dr. Daniel Martell, agreed that there was

some evidence of organic brain damage, opining that “the impairment that he does

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have appears to be mild to moderate and specific to [several] focal areas . . . : the

tapping deficit, particularly with his right hand, implicating the left motor strip, the

mathematic learning disability and the possibility of an attention deficit disorder.”

Martell nevertheless concluded that Raheem’s organic brain abnormality did not

affect his behavior or his functioning in any of the ways that Gur had posited.

Martell admitted that Raheem’s deficits in temporal lobe functioning would “be of

interest” to a jury considering how to sentence Raheem -- and that had he been on

the defense team and seen Dr. Gur’s testing, he would have told them to present it

in mitigation. But Dr. Martell also said that he did not see any evidence that

Raheem was “unable to control his behavior,” or that he lacked the ability to

understand the world around him, or, finally, that he had impaired executive

functioning (i.e., problems with decision making and judgment). In his report, also

submitted as an exhibit at the state habeas hearing, Martell concluded, “Raheem

does not suffer from significant brain damage, and he is neither psychotic nor

delusional.”

      Beyond the issue of organic brain damage, the petition offered evidence,

discovered for the first time postconviction, that Raheem suffers from a seizure

disorder, which causes brief “absence seizures.” Dr. Martell noted that they were

ten to thirty seconds in duration. Martell added that Raheem’s sister and father’s

affidavits in the postconviction record describing periods when Raheem would be

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“conscious but unresponsive” as a child “suggest[ed] to [him] that this may be a

longstanding disorder.”

      Dr. Martell explained that when Raheem came out of one of these periods,

he was extremely self-conscious, was “aware that he had been gone,” and “would

make up stories to cover it up.” This behavior suggested to Martell an epileptic

phenomenon. Martell explained that if Raheem was having one of these absences

at the time of trial, he could “zon[e] out for 30 seconds at a time,” and although

Martell “d[idn]’t see that as particularly disabling,” he conceded that “it’s certainly

conceivable that he could zone out at a moment when there’s critical testimony and

miss that testimony.” When habeas counsel told Martell that Raheem had

experienced two fainting episodes while in jail, Martell testified that this behavior

is “quite consistent with a seizure disorder.”

      However, Dr. Martell squarely said that Raheem was competent to stand

trial: “I think he was competent then, and I think he’s probably competent now.”

What’s more, Martell testified that even if Raheem had absence seizures, this

would not have affected his responsibility for his crimes. Martell “doubt[ed]” that

Raheem could shoot someone during one of these seizures, because he was

unfocused during the seizures, “which would be inconsistent with focusing,

aiming, and shooting a gun at some distance,” and a seizure lasting for ten hours

would be “rare.”

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      Dr. Gur also reviewed Raheem’s videotaped interview with Martell and

concluded that it evidenced a “seizure disorder.” When asked why he had not

arrived at this diagnosis himself, he replied, “Well, I didn’t spend a lot of time with

him. I only spent about three or four hours, and most of this time was taken up by

testing. And if he had those absences during my interview I have to admit,

embarrassingly, that I didn’t notice them.” He then noted that “these are not easily

picked up and there are also days when they don’t happen.” Gur added that

Raheem exhibited psychosis, characterized by flat and inappropriate affect as well

as a delusional belief in the existence of parallel universes. However, during the

habeas hearing, Dr. Gur expressly said he was not diagnosing Raheem with

epilepsy or as having absence seizures.

      Dr. Gur gave conflicting testimony about whether these absences might have

affected Raheem’s competency to stand trial. Gur agreed with counsel that if

Raheem had an absence seizure during the trial, his mind would be “literally

absent”: he would not be able to hear the proceedings in the courtroom; he would

“not be able to respond,” and someone could shake him and he would not know.

Gur said that Raheem’s “jocular behavior during the trial, his inappropriate affect

and his refusal to acknowledge that there is anything wrong with him mentally”

could interfere with the ability of his attorneys to defend him. When the state

habeas court asked Gur for anything specific that led him to conclude that Raheem

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was incompetent, Gur responded: “I think mostly his lack of contact with reality,

his confabulations, memory distortions, his mannerisms. I think when you put

them together it puts [an] obstacle in the relationship between the lawyer and the

client.” But Gur acknowledged that he did not talk to Raheem’s trial counsel about

their communications with Raheem. Further, Gur admitted that Raheem was able

to participate in tests and gave valid test results, working with many doctors. Gur

added that Raheem understood him and his role, and that Raheem was able to

communicate with Gur and was “apparently oriented to time, place, and person.”

      As for whether the absence seizures could have affected Raheem’s behavior

during the commission of the crimes, Gur acknowledged that having epilepsy

would not directly cause someone to kill people. Indeed, that would be

“ridiculous,” but “[h]aving epilepsy can be a condition where under certain

circumstances [it] can contribute to behavior of the kind that can end up killing

people.” Asked whether a seizure could last for as long as ten hours, Gur

responded that “there is a situation called status epilepticus that can last for several

hours,” although what he saw in a videotape of Raheem were thirty-second to two-

minute “staring spells.”

      When the state habeas judge directly asked Gur whether it was his position

that “either or both of these murders was caused by a seizure,” Gur testified that he

did not know, and that Raheem would need to be evaluated by an epileptologist to

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see if he has epilepsy. Finally, Gur concluded that generally, Raheem knew right

from wrong.

      Raheem also submitted an affidavit from Dr. Melissa Carran, a neurologist

and epileptologist. Carran reviewed the record and diagnosed Raheem with

epilepsy, noting that while she could not precisely identify the type of seizures

Raheem suffers from, his presentation in the videos she watched was “consistent

with a person suffering from either absence seizures, or brief complex partial

seizures.” However, Dr. Carran did not meet with Raheem and did not conduct

electrophysiology, which Dr. Gur testified was necessary to diagnose an individual

with epilepsy.

      Attorneys Futch and Crumbley both agreed in their postconviction testimony

that they saw some evidence of Raheem’s absence seizures -- though they did not

identify them as that at the time -- during their representation of Raheem at trial.

Crumbley testified that “there were times when he was not responsive. There were

times when he, you know, avoided my efforts to engage with him in a

conversation.” However, Crumbley made clear that he “never saw anything that

seemed, that suggested any sort of psychiatric abnormality, or anything of that

nature.” By contrast, attorney Futch testified that he had in fact observed the

behavior now described as absence seizures. Futch noted that when Raheem

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would “drift off,” counsel would “get him back on task and then he could become

communicative” again. Futch elaborated:

       In our many meetings and interactions with each other, he would, for
       lack of a better way to explain it, like, go off somewhere else in his
       mind. We’d have to bring him back to where we were. Where he went,
       what he was thinking about, I have no clue but he was hard to focus,
       hard to pin down on things that obviously would be helpful to his
       defense team, to try to investigate. And just in the personal interactions
       with him, it was apparent that he, I thought there was something wrong
       with him.

But Futch also testified that Raheem’s behavior generally was “appropriate during

the trial.”

       In addition, both attorneys testified that they were never told that Raheem

was incompetent. Futch said:

       I can’t for the life of me think that, you know, Wade Crumbley and
       myself, who defended countless defendants in cases, would not have
       taken our only expert at the time telling us he’s not competent and not
       have some kind of hearing on that. . . . I mean, we’re just the lawyers,
       and we had the Court appoint an expert to help us in that regard, and
       we’re going to take his or her opinions as they come.

Futch was clear that “my opinion would be that he was competent to stand trial,

otherwise, I would have . . . fought very vigorously to have his trial postponed.”

Crumbley agreed: “I didn’t have any mental health expert telling me that [Raheem]

was insane or that he was incompetent . . . . No one ever suggested to me that

[Raheem] was not competent. My own impression was that he was competent.”

                                          B.

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      On this record, Raheem argues that his trial counsel were ineffective for

failing to further investigate and present to the jury evidence of his mental illness,

cognitive deficits, brain damage, and seizure disorder. The state habeas court

rejected this claim, finding that counsel “reasonably investigated [Raheem’s]

mental health” and were not deficient in their presentation of mitigating evidence

during the guilt and sentencing phases of Raheem’s trial. These decisions were not

based on unreasonable determinations of the facts in light of the evidence

presented, nor were they contrary to or an unreasonable application of clearly

established federal law.

      As we’ve detailed, Raheem’s counsel conducted an extensive investigation

into his mental health before trial, and offered a fulsome presentation of mitigating

evidence at trial. Counsel consulted with four different mental health experts,

seeking and obtaining funds from the trial court for evaluations and tests on

multiple occasions. Each expert administered testing and provided their findings

to counsel, and Crumbley and Futch followed up on each suggestion from these

experts.

      The record further reflects counsel’s and Dr. Farrar’s particularly active

roles in investigating and evaluating Raheem’s mental health. Farrar testified that

even though he had tested and treated Raheem when he was younger, in the year

before trial, on average, he met with Raheem at the jail about “once every three

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weeks.” After Raheem was arrested, Farrar not only administered more tests and

met with Raheem “multiple times,” but also met members of Raheem’s family

“several times.” Crumbley likewise testified that counsel spoke with Farrar often:

he said he met with Farrar “at least ten or 12 and . . . maybe more, like, 20 or 30”

times.

         Then, two doctors -- Farrar and Nord -- ultimately testified in detail at

Raheem’s trial, offering not only an explanation for his admissions, but also

providing the jury with ample mitigating evidence of his troubled mental health,

including major depressive disorder, multiple suicide attempts, borderline

personality disorder, and narcissistic and antisocial features. Further, over

Raheem’s initial objection, trial counsel succeeded in calling Raheem’s mother and

father as well. They described his unusual behavior as a child and pleaded with the

jury to spare his life. Raheem’s counsel ended their arguments highlighting his

mental illnesses and the possibility of rehabilitation in prison. They also rebutted

the prosecutor’s claim of future dangerousness, and finally, offered a residual

doubt theory.6

6
  As for the argument Raheem raises in his reply brief to this Court -- challenging, for the first
time, counsel’s residual doubt strategy -- we decline to consider it. “As we repeatedly have
admonished, arguments raised for the first time in a reply brief are not properly before a
reviewing court.” Herring v. Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr., 397 F.3d 1338, 1342 (11th Cir. 2005)
(quotations omitted, alteration adopted).

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       Raheem nonetheless claims that the mental health investigation undertaken

by counsel was “too little and too late.” Importantly, however, he agrees that the

investigation proceeded along this timeline: soon after counsel were appointed,

they quickly began investigating Raheem’s background and mental health, meeting

with Raheem’s family and Dr. Farrar. Trial counsel sought funds from the court

and officially hired Farrar more than a year before trial. And on Farrar’s

recommendation, Drs. Klopper and Herendeen were hired by counsel, and then,

upon the experts’ further recommendations, imaging tests were promptly

scheduled.7 The record reflects nothing but speed and diligence from trial

counsel, and Raheem has given us nothing to suggest otherwise.

       Raheem similarly disputes the state habeas court’s determination that “[t]rial

counsel followed up on each suggestion from the mental health professionals,”

since Farrar told counsel that “a full battery of neuropsychological testing was

needed.” But trial counsel unequivocally testified that there were no tests

specifically suggested -- with the exception of the PET scan that Raheem refused

to take -- that weren’t conducted. See Darling v. Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr., 619 F.3d

1279, 1284 (11th Cir. 2010) (“Nor could a reasonable jurist debate the conclusion

7
  The MRI took place several weeks before trial, and the PET scan that Raheem ultimately
refused to take was scheduled during voir dire. During a pretrial conference, Crumbley
explained that he had diligently tried to schedule the PET scan earlier, but that Emory was
simply unable to accommodate them at any earlier date.
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that [the defendant’s] attorneys were entitled to rely on the psychological

evaluation performed by [their expert], which did not recommend that [the

defendant] be further evaluated for brain damage.”). To the contrary, counsel

diligently pursued each test and recommendation. When Farrar suggested that

neuropsychological testing was needed, defense counsel hired Drs. Klopper and

Herendeen to conduct further tests. Klopper and Farrar then suggested in a

December 2000 meeting -- after Klopper and Herendeen had both examined

Raheem and found nothing “real clear” or helpful -- that an MRI and a PET scan

might help. Again, counsel pursued this advice, scheduling both procedures. As

the record reveals, counsel followed up at every turn.

      As for the failure to ask for a continuance when Raheem refused to take the

PET scan, it’s notable that Raheem never submitted to a PET scan in

postconviction. It’s hard to find that this was so critical a test that no reasonable

attorney would have failed to seek a continuance in order to reschedule it, when in

all the years since Raheem’s convictions, his attorneys apparently never had him

take a PET scan.

      Raheem also blames trial counsel for failing to investigate and present

evidence of a seizure disorder. The record reveals, however, that trial counsel

actually introduced some evidence of the absence seizures at trial, when Drs.

Farrar and Nord “appeared to correlate the ‘absences’ to [Raheem’s] fantasy

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world.” Nord expressly testified that as part of Raheem’s mental illness, he would

“zone out and move into another world, which he had control of,” and that “he’s on

the verge of becoming psychotic [meaning he hallucinates], but he’s still within

some range of reason.” Farrar too described Raheem’s fantasy world at trial.

      As we see it, trial counsel did not disregard evidence of the seizure disorder,

but instead, presented the evidence about Raheem’s absences known to them at the

time of trial -- after consulting with four experts, none of whom diagnosed Raheem

with a seizure disorder. As for Dr. Martell’s opinion at the habeas hearing that the

absence seizures were different from Raheem’s fantasy world, Martell clarified

that he was unsure, and that Raheem was “a very unusual case that the medical

center would love to have lots of doctors do a grand rounds about.” Even Dr. Gur

admitted he did not arrive at the seizure disorder diagnosis himself despite

spending some time with Raheem. He added that if Raheem suffers from this

disorder, it would be hard even for an expert to spot it. In light of the difficulties

Raheem’s experts had in noticing his absence seizures, we cannot fault the state

habeas court for finding that Raheem’s trial counsel were not deficient to the extent

that they too were unaware of the absence seizures.

      Indeed, as the state court found, “Dr. Martell merely presented a theory of

‘absence seizures’ possibly linked with epilepsy,” but “there is no conclusive

evidence” that Raheem actually suffers from a seizure disorder, namely epilepsy.

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This is consistent with the record. Dr. Martell said that Raheem’s behavior merely

“raised the possibility” that Raheem had absence seizures and noted that additional

testing would be necessary to determine this conclusively. And although Dr.

Carran was an epileptologist who diagnosed Raheem with epilepsy, she did not

conduct electrophysiology tests or even meet with Raheem, and none of the other

experts diagnosed Raheem with epilepsy. On this record, Raheem has not met his

burden of rebutting the state court’s factual determinations “by clear and

convincing evidence.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1). Nor can we say that the state

habeas court’s conclusions concerning counsel’s investigation into or presentation

of Raheem’s possible epileptic disorder -- or other mental health issues, for that

matter -- were based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the

evidence presented, nor were they contrary to or an unreasonable application of

clearly established federal law.

                                          C.

      Raheem also takes issue with counsel’s investigation into and presentation

of his background and social history at trial. The state habeas court found that

“trial counsel conducted a thorough mitigation investigation,” including

“obtain[ing] all of Petitioner’s school, medical, mental health, court and juvenile

records that were in existence,” “attempt[ing] to locate all of Petitioner’s family

members to see if they would be cooperative,” and “tr[ying] to interview all of the

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mental health professionals and counselors who had previously treated Petitioner.”

The court concluded that Raheem failed to establish that his counsel’s investigation

into mitigating background evidence and the presentation of that evidence during

sentencing was deficient or that he was prejudiced. We cannot say that the state

court’s determination on this score was contrary to or an unreasonable application

of federal law, nor was it based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in

light of the evidence presented.

      As the record reflects, counsel’s investigation into Raheem’s background

and social history was substantial. Counsel met with Raheem’s parents and sister

on multiple occasions and other family members at least once, and Crumbley

testified that Raheem’s family was cooperative and wanted to help counsel.

Crumbley talked “at length” with Raheem’s parents about “everywhere he’d been

to school, everywhere he’d ever been to the doctor, everywhere he’d ever been for

counseling.” This investigation was thorough -- counsel attempted to get all of

Raheem’s available school, medical, and prison records, testifying that “[w]e got

every kind of record we could think of.”

      Raheem claims, nevertheless, that the investigation raised red flags, counsel

did not follow up, and if counsel had done so, they would have discovered

evidence of a troubled childhood. They would have offered evidence that his

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father Askia was “militaristic, brutal, and abusive,” and that he beat Raheem. They

would have also maintained that Raheem’s home environment was a hostile one.

      In support of this claim, Raheem relies on his family’s postconviction

affidavits, including a statement from Raheem’s father that he whipped Raheem,

and a statement from his sister that their father “beat [Raheem] often, even for little

things.” In addition, Raheem points to Crumbley’s testimony that while Raheem’s

father was “a very nice man, very articulate, very well-mannered,” he was also

“guarded” and “seemed to be a very proud person.” Crumbley said that because of

this, he “wondered whether if there was some terrible secret in the family whether

he would tell it or let anybody tell it.”

      Raheem argues that there was in fact something else there and counsel

should have looked further. But Crumbley’s account makes clear that he and

Futch did look, and were disappointed to learn that there was not as much

mitigating evidence as they hoped to find. See Gissendaner v. Seaboldt, 735 F.3d

1311, 1329–30 (11th Cir. 2013); Williams v. Head, 185 F.3d 1223, 1237 (11th Cir.

1999).

      Moreover, the information that defense counsel did elicit contradicts much

of the new abuse allegations contained in the postconviction affidavits. Crumbley

testified during postconviction proceedings that none of Raheem’s family members

ever indicated to him that Raheem’s father was abusive to him. Raheem’s records

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from Charter Peachford Hospital also note that Raheem “denie[d] a history of

physical or sexual abuse.” The hospital records even report that Raheem’s mother

relayed that Raheem had “a friend in his father,” and that the two had a “special

relationship”; their disciplinary methods (a realm “mostly” reserved for Raheem’s

father) included taking away privileges and talking with Raheem. And while his

mother denied any physical abuse of Raheem, she noted that Raheem had made

verbal threats to his sister. Similarly, records drawn from Raheem’s stay at

Baldwin State Prison revealed that Raheem denied ever having experienced any

sexual or physical abuse. In fact, he described having “a good relationship with his

parents.” Raheem has given us nothing to suggest that trial counsel had any reason

to be on alert of the physical abuse he now claims he suffered.

      Furthermore, if counsel had elicited this new information in mitigation, they

might have strategically chosen not to present it because it would have been

powerfully contradicted at trial. What’s more, much of it is cumulative to what

was uncovered during counsel’s investigation and presented at the penalty phase.

See Darling, 619 F.3d at 1284 (“No reasonable jurist could debate the holding that

the fact that [the petitioner] now has gathered additional evidence about his

background that differs in some minor respects from the evidence actually

presented at trial does not render his attorneys’ performance deficient and certainly

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does not render the decision of the [state supreme court] objectively

unreasonable.”).

      As we’ve noted, counsel knew that Raheem had exhibited troubling behavior

from a young age, that people close to him noticed these things, that he had

experienced head injuries as a child, and that he had attempted suicide on several

occasions. They also knew that Raheem’s parents’ marriage had broken down,

that Raheem had attempted suicide after his mother’s mental breakdown, and that

Raheem’s father resisted putting Raheem on any medication after his suicide

attempt. Counsel sought all of Raheem’s school, medical, and court records as

well. And then, at trial, counsel presented a full overview of the evidence

gathered, including testimony about his parents’ marriage, his father’s belief that

“something wasn’t quite right” with Raheem from a young age, and Farrar and

Nord’s opinions on Raheem’s suicide attempt, further suicidal ideation, and his

delusional behavior. Farrar described Raheem’s “family history of depression,”

noting that Raheem’s mother “had chronic depression for years.” He also told the

jury that the apparent cause of Raheem’s “acting out” and first suicide attempt was

his mother’s breakdown and depression.

      We also cannot ignore that Raheem placed limits on the witnesses counsel

could call in mitigation and the information counsel could elicit from them. Only

after “a lot of begging” and persuading members of the press not to film Raheem’s

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relatives on the witness stand did Raheem agree to let Crumbley call his parents to

the stand. And Raheem never allowed Crumbley to call his sister. Raheem also

interrupted and tried to “cut short” his mother’s testimony when she became

emotional. Raheem yelled in court, “get off the stand.” She continued to testify.

Crumbley later explained that this interruption “probably worked in his favor,”

because he thought “it suggested to the jury at least that he had concern for some

other person.”

      Because of the limits Raheem placed on his counsel’s ability to call

witnesses in mitigation, it was not unreasonable for the state court to conclude that

counsel was not deficient for not calling more members of Raheem’s family to

testify. This is especially true since Raheem’s counsel did thoroughly investigate

and present substantial mitigating evidence, including the testimony of mental

health experts Drs. Farrar and Nord. Moreover, counsel even persuaded Raheem

to permit them to call his parents to the stand during the penalty phase of trial. See

Krawczuk v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 873 F.3d 1273, 1293–94 (11th Cir. 2017)

(“When a competent defendant clearly instructs counsel either not to investigate or

not to present any mitigating evidence, . . . ‘the duty to investigate does not include

a requirement to disregard a mentally competent client’s sincere and specific

instructions about an area of defense and to obtain a court order in defiance of his

wishes.’”) (citations and quotations omitted); Blankenship v. Hall, 542 F.3d 1253,

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1277 (11th Cir. 2008) (“Significant deference is owed to failures to investigate

made under a client’s specific instructions not to involve his family.”); Newland v.

Hall, 527 F.3d 1162, 1202 (11th Cir. 2008) (“We have also emphasized the

importance of a mentally competent client’s instructions in our analysis of defense

counsel’s investigative performance under the Sixth Amendment.”).

      Based on all of the evidence we have seen, we conclude that the state court’s

determination that counsel were not deficient in their mitigation investigation or

presentation was not an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the

evidence presented, nor was it contrary to or an unreasonable application of clearly

established federal law.

                                         D.

      In any event, even if Raheem could show that his counsel were somehow

deficient, the state court’s determination that Raheem suffered no prejudice on

account of any of the alleged deficiencies in counsel’s performance was neither

contrary to nor an unreasonable application of clearly established law, nor was it

based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence

presented. To show prejudice, “it must be established that, but for counsel’s

unprofessional performance, there is a reasonable probability the result of the

proceeding would have been different.” Putman v. Head, 268 F.3d 1223, 1248

(11th Cir. 2001). “‘It is not enough for the [petitioner] to show the errors had some

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conceivable effect on the outcome of the proceeding . . . ,’ because ‘[v]irtually

every act or omission of counsel would meet that test.’” Id. (quoting Strickland,

466 U.S. at 693) (alterations and ellipses in original). Simple mistakes or strategic

errors are not enough, nor are serious errors if, absent those errors, there is no

“reasonable probability” that the outcome would have been different. Strickland,

466 U.S. at 694. “A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine

confidence in the outcome.” Id. The Supreme Court has explained:

      Strickland asks whether it is “reasonably likely” the result would have
      been different. This does not require a showing that counsel’s actions
      “more likely than not altered the outcome,” but the difference between
      Strickland’s prejudice standard and a more-probable-than-not standard
      is slight and matters “only in the rarest case.” The likelihood of a
      different result must be substantial, not just conceivable.

Harrington, 562 U.S. at 111–12 (citations omitted).

      “In the capital sentencing context, the prejudice inquiry asks whether there

is a reasonable probability that, absent the errors, the sentencer . . . would have

concluded that the balance of aggravating and mitigating circumstances did not

warrant death.” Id. at 522–23 (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 695). Thus, “[i]n

assessing prejudice, we reweigh the evidence in aggravation against the totality of

available mitigating evidence.” Wiggins, 539 U.S. at 534 (emphasis added). We

examine all of the good and all of the bad, what was presented during the trial and

what was offered later, collaterally. The question is whether, “viewed as a whole

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and cumulative of mitigation evidence presented originally,” there is “‘a

reasonable probability that the result of the sentencing proceeding would have been

different’ if competent counsel had presented and explained the significance of all

the available evidence.” Williams, 529 U.S. at 399.

      In determining whether a reasonable probability of a different outcome

exists, we presume a reasonable decisionmaker. See Nix v. Whiteside, 475 U.S.

157, 175 (1986) (“[I]n judging prejudice and the likelihood of a different outcome,

‘a defendant has no entitlement to the luck of a lawless decisionmaker.’”

(alteration adopted) (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 695)). Additionally, “[w]hen

a state court has applied clearly established federal law to reasonably determined

facts in the process of adjudicating a claim on the merits, a federal habeas court

may not disturb the state court’s decision unless its error lies ‘beyond any

possibility for fairminded disagreement.’” Shinn, 141 S. Ct. at 520 (quoting

Harrington, 562 U.S. at 103).

      We start with what is indisputable: the evidence in aggravation was very

substantial. First, the brutality of the crimes was thoroughly explicated at trial.

Raheem committed a cold-blooded double homicide, first shooting his friend

Brandon Hollis in the back of the head for no apparent reason and then telling

Jenkins that he was not dead “but he is on his way out.” After shooting Brandon,

Raheem took his keys and wallet and he and Jenkins went to the Hollis home,

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where Raheem used Brandon’s keys to go inside. Once in the home, Raheem

twice shot at Brandon’s mother Miriam Hollis, who had been sitting in a chair

reading a book, killing her with the second shot. Raheem placed a garbage bag he

had purchased earlier over Miriam’s head to contain her blood as it seeped onto the

carpet. He then stole Miriam’s car keys, stuffed her body in the trunk of her

vehicle, and took her car. Hours later, Raheem returned to Miriam’s house -- her

body still in the trunk of the car -- with his girlfriend and Jenkins, and they

burglarized Miriam’s house. Raheem desecrated Miriam’s body, first parading it

around in the trunk of the car for hours and showing it off, and then dousing her

body with gasoline or alcohol and burning it on train tracks.

      Indeed, six statutory aggravators were argued to the jury, and all of them

were found beyond a reasonable doubt, including that: (1) the murder of Brandon

Hollis was committed while in the commission of the armed robbery of Brandon

Hollis; (2) the murder of Brandon Hollis was committed for the purpose of

receiving things of monetary value; (3) the murder of Miriam Hollis was

committed during the course of another capital felony, the murder of Brandon

Hollis; (4) the murder of Miriam Hollis was committed in the course of a burglary;

(5) the murder of Miriam Hollis was committed during the armed robbery of

Miriam Hollis; and (6) the murder of Miriam Hollis was committed for the purpose

of receiving things of value. Ga. Code Ann. §§ 17-10-30(b)(2), (4).

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      In addition, during the penalty phase, the prosecution presented substantial

evidence of future dangerousness. The state introduced court records showing that

Raheem carried a weapon on school property when he was fifteen and stole an

automobile and fled from police when he was seventeen.

      The prosecutor also called a number of jail officers who testified about

contraband that had been found in Raheem’s cell. First, an officer testified that

officials found a “large shank” and razor blade that were “stuck to the frame of his

bed,” as well as another shank in the smoke detector. The officer explained that a

shank is a sharpened “homemade tool,” and said that the larger one -- at least a foot

long -- was one of the largest that she had ever seen as an officer. Another officer

testified that during a separate search of the cell, officials found hidden under a

bunk a chair leg that had been ripped off. A third officer testified that he also

found a detailed map of the jail in Raheem’s cell, with Raheem’s name on it, as

well as a sock filled with rocks and a golf ball.

      A fourth officer testified that he spoke with Raheem about the murders and

Raheem said he “had to do what [he] had to do. It was just business.” This officer

“asked if [Raheem] ever thought about anything that happened or if he could go

back and change anything,” and Raheem “said no.” On another occasion, Raheem

threatened the officer, telling him he knew who he was, and saying, “I also know

you’re a witness in my case, you little snitch. . . . I’ll kill you.” Raheem told the

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officer that he knew the officer had pepper spray, and if he sprayed Raheem with

it, Raheem would kill him. The officer further testified that Raheem “practically

ran the [cell] block.”

      Finally, the prosecution called a jail inmate, who testified that Raheem told

him that Raheem planned to kill his girlfriend, “because she was testifying against

him,” and that he also planned to kill the prosecuting district attorney -- Tommy

Floyd -- saying that “Tommy Floyd didn’t know who he was messing with.”

      Not only did the jury hear extensive aggravating evidence about the murders

and about Raheem’s future dangerousness, Raheem’s attorneys, as we’ve detailed,

presented substantial evidence about his mental health in mitigation. See supra

discussion at 26-32 (summarizing testimony from Dr. Farrar, Dr. Nord and

Raheem’s parents about Raheem’s borderline personality disorder, his depression,

his oppositional defiance disorder, his impulsivity and hostility towards others, and

his suicide attempts).

      “[N]o prejudice can result from the exclusion of cumulative evidence.”

Dallas v. Warden, 964 F.3d 1285, 1310 (11th Cir. 2020) (quotations omitted).

“Mitigating evidence in postconviction proceedings is cumulative when it tells a

more detailed version of the same story told at trial or provides more or better

examples or amplifies the themes presented to the jury.” Id. at 1308 (quotations

omitted). The Supreme Court has found evidence cumulative where it

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“substantiate[s],” “support[s],” or “explain[s]” more general testimony provided at

trial. Cullen v. Pinholster, 563 U.S. 170, 200–01 (2011). Here, much of the

additional mitigation evidence about Raheem’s brain damage and seizure disorder

would have only “substantiate[d],” “support[ed],” or “explain[ed]” more general

testimony offered at trial, and therefore would have been at least somewhat

cumulative. Id.

      As for the remaining new evidence about Raheem’s brain damage,

psychosis, and seizure disorder, we cannot ignore the circumstances surrounding

the crimes he committed, which would have undermined the probative value of this

additional evidence. The state habeas court explained that the “cognitive deficits”

and “organic brain impairment” Raheem pointed to showed that he “may act

impulsive, use poor judgment and had trouble with decision-making.” But, it

found, “[e]ven viewing [Raheem’s] proposed evidence in its most ‘mitigating’

light, . . . there is no reasonable probability that the jury or the courts would have

rendered a different determination had it been presented. The crimes were horrific

and cold-blooded, showing calculation, planning and execution over a 10-hour

period.”

      The state court’s decision was not contrary to or an unreasonable application

of clearly established law, nor was it based on an unreasonable determination of

the facts in light of the evidence presented. It is supported by the evidence

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showing that Raheem had “extensive opportunities to consider his actions”: after

Raheem picked up the gun from Gibbs’s apartment, he pulled to the side of the

road and twice shot out of the window, telling Jenkins he wanted to make sure it

would not jam; on the way to pick up Brandon Hollis, Raheem, with obvious

forethought, stopped at Kroger and bought a box of trash bags; after shooting

Brandon, Raheem took his keys and wallet, and used the keys to open the front

door of Brandon’s house; he told Jenkins to bring in a trash bag before they entered

Brandon’s house, and used it to contain the blood after he shot Miriam Hollis in

the head; he attempted to mop up the blood that seeped onto the carpet; Raheem

and Jenkins went to dispose of Miriam’s body many hours later after keeping her

body in the trunk of her Lexus and showing it off to Raheem’s girlfriend; Raheem

instructed a friend to hide the murder weapon; and when questioned by the police

after the double homicide, he claimed that Jenkins was the shooter. Shinn, 141 S.

Ct. at 525.

      At virtually every stage of this ten-hour crime spree, Raheem attempted to

conceal and disguise the crimes he had committed. On this record, the state court

did not unreasonably weigh the potential brain damage evidence against the full

slate of aggravating evidence introduced. See Franks v. GDCP Warden, 975 F.3d

1165, 1183 (11th Cir. 2020) (noting that the petitioner’s background and “facts of

the case powerfully undercut the equivocal expert testimony about [the

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petitioner’s] cognitive deficits -- specifically that he suffered from impaired

executive functioning”).

      And even assuming that Raheem did have absence seizures, this would not

explain his crimes. Dr. Martell “doubt[ed]” that Raheem would shoot someone

during one of these seizures, because he was unfocused during them, “which

would be inconsistent with focusing, aiming, and shooting a gun at some distance,”

and a seizure lasting ten hours would be “rare.” Even Dr. Gur admitted he did not

know if either murder was caused by a seizure, noting that Raheem would need to

be evaluated for epilepsy by an epileptologist, and he thought that Raheem

generally knew right from wrong. Thus, the state court’s prejudice rationale is not

“so obviously wrong” as to be “beyond any possibility for fairminded

disagreement.” Shinn, 141 S. Ct. at 526 (quotations omitted).

      What’s more, the experts’ postconviction testimony about Raheem’s mental

health would have been substantially undermined by Martell’s other testimony.

Dr. Martell testified that Raheem did not have “significant” brain damage, the

brain damage did not impact his executive functioning, and Martell was

unconvinced that his cognitive defects “caused him to be unable to control himself

when he did the things he did.” His report concluded that Raheem was “neither

psychotic nor delusional.”

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      We’ve previously found that petitioners were not prejudiced where the

expert mental health testimony was equivocal. See Dallas, 964 F.3d at 1310

(“Introducing the ADHD diagnosis would have opened the door to [an expert’s]

testimony that [the petitioner] was of ‘average intelligence’ -- testimony that would

have been harmful to [the petitioner] since it would have undermined [the other

expert’s ADHD] assessment.”); Franks, 975 F.3d at 1182–83 (finding no prejudice

where “the expert testimony was far more equivocal” than other cases where “the

evidence was unequivocal and powerfully contextualized otherwise inexplicable

crimes”). “Indeed, both the Supreme Court and this Court have consistently

rejected the prejudice argument where mitigation evidence was a two-edged sword

or would have opened the door to damaging evidence.” Dallas, 964 F.3d at 1310–

11 (quoting Ponticelli v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 690 F.3d 1271, 1296 (11th Cir.

2012)) (quotations omitted, alterations adopted). In light of the conflicting expert

opinions offered, a reasonable jury easily could have rejected Raheem’s evidence

about brain damage, or more importantly, any suggestion that brain damage

somehow contributed to or explained the double homicide and the other crimes.

See Darling, 619 F.3d at 1285.

      As for new evidence about Raheem’s social history or background, what

came out in Raheem’s postconviction proceedings comes nowhere near the

extreme abuse and deprivation elicited in cases where the Supreme Court has

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found prejudice as a result of counsel’s failure to offer mitigating evidence. The

additional evidence about his background was largely that his parents were

unwilling or unable to help in his mental health treatment, and the allegation that

Raheem’s father was physically abusive to him.

      But in cases where the Supreme Court has found prejudice, “the disparity

between what was presented at trial and what was offered collaterally was vast. In

other words, the balance between the aggravating and mitigating evidence at trial

and in postconviction proceedings shifted enormously, so much so as to have

profoundly altered each of the defendants’ sentencing profiles.” Dallas, 964 F.3d

at 1312. The allegations Raheem has presented collaterally, while disturbing, do

not paint a picture of abuse like that in those cases and would not have “profoundly

altered” Raheem’s profile at the penalty phase. See, e.g., Wiggins, 539 U.S. at 535

(trial counsel introduced no evidence about the “severe privation and abuse in the

first six years of [the petitioner’s] life while in the custody of his alcoholic,

absentee mother,” and later “physical torment, sexual molestation, and repeated

rape during his subsequent years in foster care”).

      The testimony concerning Raheem’s father’s claimed abuse would have

been undermined by contradictory information available to counsel at the time of

trial, including Crumbley’s testimony that none of Raheem’s family members ever

indicated to him that Raheem’s father was abusive to him; Raheem’s records from

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Charter Peachford Hospital indicating that Raheem and his mother denied a history

of physical abuse; and Raheem’s Baldwin State Prison records indicating that he

denied suffering from any sexual or physical abuse, and reported having “a good

relationship with his parents.”

      What we are left with is the powerful aggravating evidence and substantial

mitigating evidence actually presented at trial, weighed against the additional

mitigating, though substantially cumulative evidence about mental health, along

with some evidence about brain damage, and arguably contradictory evidence of

childhood abuse. We cannot conclude, on this record, that it was contrary to or an

unreasonable application of Strickland for the state habeas court to find no

prejudice. As we’ve said, it is not enough for Raheem to convince this Court that

we would review this body of evidence differently under a de novo Strickland

review; rather, he is required to establish that the state habeas court’s weighing was

unreasonable. This he cannot do.

                                         IV.

      We are similarly unpersuaded by Raheem’s procedural and substantive

claims of incompetency to stand trial.

      First, he says the state trial court violated his procedural due process rights

under Pate v. Robinson, 383 U.S. 375 (1966), by failing to sua sponte hold a

competency hearing. Because Raheem did not raise this claim on direct review,

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the claim is procedurally defaulted. See James v. Singletary, 957 F.2d 1562, 1572

(11th Cir. 1992) (“Pate claims can and must be raised on direct appeal.”). When “a

state court determines that a claim was defaulted on procedural grounds,” we

review it on the merits only when a petitioner shows that cause and prejudice exist

for the default or a “fundamental miscarriage of justice -- i.e., that a constitutional

violation has resulted in the conviction of someone who is actually innocent.”

Ledford v. Warden, Ga. Diagnostic Prison, 975 F.3d 1145, 1160–61 (11th Cir.

2020) (quotations omitted). Raheem does not invoke the fundamental-miscarriage-

of-justice exception; instead, he argues he can overcome his default by showing

cause and prejudice -- in this case, by demonstrating that his counsel were

ineffective in failing to raise his procedural due process claim. See id. (noting that

ineffective assistance of counsel may constitute cause to overcome a procedural

default). Second, Raheem says that regardless of the failure of the state court to

hold a hearing, his substantive due process rights were violated because he was in

fact tried while incompetent. The state habeas court did not address this question,

and we review the district court’s ruling on this issue for clear error. See

Lawrence, 700 F.3d at 477.

      Applying Strickland, the state habeas court concluded that there was no

deficiency of counsel and no prejudice in failing to ask for a competency hearing,

and, therefore, that Raheem could not overcome the procedural default of his Pate

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claim. Because “ineffective assistance adequate to establish cause for the

procedural default of some other constitutional claim is itself an independent

constitutional claim,” to succeed now, Raheem must overcome the double

deference of AEDPA review of the performance prong of Strickland claims.

Edwards v. Carpenter, 529 U.S. 446, 451 (2000) (emphases in original). That is,

he must show that it was objectively unreasonable for his attorneys to fail to raise

the claim -- by failing to ask for a hearing -- and that reasonable jurists could not

disagree on that question.

      Raheem first argues that his counsel were ineffective for failing to seek a

competency hearing because, according to Farrar’s postconviction affidavit, he told

counsel around the time of trial that Raheem was incompetent. The state habeas

court made a factual finding, however, that Farrar did not do so. Both attorneys

testified unequivocally that they did not recall Farrar telling them Raheem was

incompetent and that if they had been told, they would have investigated it or

asked for a continuance and a hearing. The state court credited the testimony of

Futch and Crumbley and discounted Farrar’s testimony.

      The record lends support to the state court’s treatment of this claim. At an

April 2000 pretrial hearing on a motion requesting additional funds, the defense

called Dr. Farrar. Dr. Farrar told the trial court that he recommended that Raheem

be put on certain psychiatric medications. Trial counsel noted that “obviously, Mr.

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Raheem . . . would have to agree to do that. I mean, he is mentally competent, is

he not, to make his own decision about that?” Farrar unequivocally responded,

“Yes, sir, he is.” We recognize that competency concerning medical decisions is

not quite the same thing as competency to stand trial. But this testimony is surely

probative of what Farrar believed at the time, when Raheem was preparing for

trial, and suggests that Farrar did not believe that Raheem was incompetent to

stand trial.

       “Determining the credibility of witnesses is the province and function of the

state courts, not a federal court engaging in habeas review.” Consalvo v. Sec’y for

Dep’t of Corr., 664 F.3d 842, 845 (11th Cir. 2011). Furthermore, “[w]e consider

questions about the credibility and demeanor of a witness to be questions of fact.”

Id. Applying the AEDPA presumption of correctness to the state habeas court’s

factual determination that Farrar’s testimony was less credible than the attorneys’,

we cannot find that Raheem has rebutted the presumption by clear and convincing

evidence. See id.; 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1). This is especially true since Farrar’s

testimony appears to have been inconsistent over time.

       The state habeas court made further factual determinations supporting the

conclusion that counsel were not ineffective for failing to seek a competency

hearing, none of which were unreasonable. The state court credited defense

counsel’s testimony that no mental health expert -- neither Farrar nor anyone else -

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- told them that Raheem was incompetent, and they believed Raheem to be

competent. It also credited Dr. Martell’s testimony at the habeas hearing that

Raheem’s erratic behavior before and during trial was not indicative of

incompetency. Raheem has not rebutted these credibility determinations by clear

and convincing evidence. Accordingly, it was not contrary to or an unreasonable

application of Strickland to conclude, as the state habeas court did, that there was

no prejudicially ineffective assistance of counsel to overcome the procedural

default of Raheem’s Pate claim.

       Raheem also argues that his substantive due process rights were violated

because he was in fact incompetent to stand trial. This is a separate question from

whether the trial court erred by not sua sponte holding a competency hearing, and

the parties agree that a substantive incompetency claim like Raheem’s cannot be

procedurally defaulted. See Lawrence, 700 F.3d at 481 (adhering to “both pre–

and post-AEDPA precedent . . . holding that substantive competency claims

generally cannot be procedurally defaulted”). The substantive test for competency

is whether a defendant has, at the time of trial, “sufficient . . . ability to consult

with his lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding -- and whether

he has a rational as well as factual understanding of the proceedings against him.”

Dusky v. United States, 362 U.S. 402, 402 (1960). A petitioner raising this kind of

claim bears the burden of demonstrating his incompetency at the time of trial by a

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preponderance of the evidence. See James, 957 F.2d at 1571. Because the state

habeas court did not make a ruling on this claim, the federal district court reviewed

it de novo.

      In so doing, the district court considered all the evidence in the record about

Raheem’s competency and found that Raheem had not established by a

preponderance of the evidence that he was incompetent. The court further held

that Raheem did not establish by clear and convincing evidence that he was

entitled to an evidentiary hearing on the claim in federal court. The district court

summarized its findings this way:

      Based on its review of the record, the Court assumes, arguendo, that
      [Raheem] did suffer brief absence seizures at the trial. But the Court
      also bears in mind the narrow test of competency to stand trial --
      whether the petitioner “has sufficient present ability to consult with his
      lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding” and
      “whether he has a rational as well as a factual understanding of the
      proceedings against him.” Dusky, 362 U.S. at 402. Given the
      narrowness of the competency standard, and the totality of the evidence
      presented in this case, this Court concludes that [Raheem] has not
      demonstrated his incompetence at the time of trial by a preponderance
      of the evidence, nor has he established by “clear and convincing
      evidence” that creates a “real, substantial, and legitimate doubt” as to
      his competence that he is entitled to an evidentiary hearing. Lawrence,
      700 F.3d at 481. Cf. Humphrey v. Walker, [] 757 S.E.2d 68 (2014).

      We review the factual finding made by the district court for clear error. See

Lawrence, 700 F.3d at 477. There was no clear error. First, Raheem’s lawyers

spent a significant amount of time with Raheem and both believed him to be

competent at the time of trial. Crumbley said, “[m]y own impression was that he
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was competent”; Futch confirmed, “he was competent to stand trial.” The

contemporaneous assessment of trial counsel is particularly probative because

competency is “primarily a function of defendant’s role in assisting counsel in

conducting the defense” and the defendant’s counsel is thus “in the best position to

determine whether the defendant’s competency is suspect.” Watts v. Singletary,

87 F.3d 1282, 1288 (11th Cir. 1996).

      Moreover, of the many mental health experts who evaluated Raheem’s

condition at the time of trial, only Farrar opined that he was incompetent, and

Farrar did not say so at trial, but rather only years later, in a postconviction

affidavit. In any event, as we’ve noted, Farrar’s testimony is not particularly

compelling since he admitted before trial that Raheem was competent at least to

make decisions about his medication. Further, Dr. Martell affirmatively asserted

that Raheem was competent. As for Dr. Gur’s postconviction testimony on the

issue of competency, Gur opined that Raheem’s behavior during trial could have

interfered with the ability of his attorneys to defend him, but he conceded that he

did not speak with Raheem’s trial counsel about their communications with

Raheem. Gur also testified that Raheem was cooperative and successfully

completed the neuropsychological testing and evaluations. Raheem has failed to

show how the district court’s ruling constituted clear error.

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      As for Raheem’s claim that his absence seizures rendered him incompetent,

the district court assumed, arguendo, that Raheem suffered these seizures at trial,

but found that his absence seizures were “brief,” and that they did not establish his

incompetency by a preponderance of the evidence taking the record as a whole.

This included evidence that Raheem was able to assist his counsel and participate

in the proceedings. Futch testified that “for the most part, [Raheem] was

appropriate during the trial.”

      The trial court also conducted colloquies of its own with Raheem before trial

-- for example, during pretrial hearings, Raheem told the court he had no

objections to defense counsel or the way in which they were conducting his

defense, and Raheem explained to the court that he refused to get out of the

transport to take the PET scan because of the attention that he would receive,

telling the court he didn’t want to be placed on display. As the state habeas court

concluded, when ruling on the procedural due process claim, there was “nothing in

these colloquies that indicates Petitioner was incompetent at trial.” Additionally,

during the sentencing phase, Raheem ultimately agreed to allow counsel to call his

parents.

      Raheem also points to Dr. Carran’s affidavit as evidence of incompetence.

Carran said that seizures “likely affect Mr. Raheem’s ability to both assist his

attorneys and understand the proceedings against him,” and “necessarily effect

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[sic] his ability to follow narrative, to respond appropriately, and to understand

fully what is taking place.” The district court assumed for its analysis, however,

that Raheem did suffer absence seizures at his trial, even noting that the record

“supports his contention that he suffers from absence seizures of brief duration.”

The district court therefore considered Carran’s opinion, but after reviewing the

“totality of the evidence,” it concluded that Raheem was competent.

        Undoubtedly, Raheem did not act in his own best interests at all times,

including when he refused to get out of the car for the scheduled PET scan and

when he told his mother to “get off the stand.” But the test for competency is not

whether he always acted in his own best interests; rather, it is whether he had

“sufficient present ability to consult with his lawyer with a reasonable degree of

rational understanding.” Dusky, 362 U.S. at 402 (quotations omitted). The district

court rightly described the competency standard as a “narrow” one. And our

review is only for clear error. See Lawrence, 700 F.3d at 477. We can discern

none.

                                          V.

        Raheem’s next claim alleges violations of the Due Process Clause. He says

his rights were violated when he was required to wear a stun belt at trial, which

unfairly communicated to the jury that he was extremely dangerous and, to

overcome his default of that claim at trial and on direct review, he argues that his

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attorneys were prejudicially ineffective for failing to protect him from that unfair

inference. See Ledford, 975 F.3d at 1160–61; Black v. Hardin, 336 S.E.2d 754,

755 (Ga. 1985) (finding that Georgia state law provides that “a failure to make

timely objection to any alleged error or deficiency or to pursue the same on appeal

ordinarily will preclude review by writ of habeas corpus,” unless the petitioner

shows cause and prejudice) (emphasis in original). The state habeas court found

no deficiency of counsel and found no prejudice as well.

          As for Raheem’s claim that defense counsel unconstitutionally allowed him

“to be restrained with shackles and/or a stun belt throughout trial,” the record

clearly reflects that a hidden stun belt, and not shackles, was used. And under our

caselaw, Raheem’s counsel could not have been ineffective for allowing Raheem’s

restraint with a stun belt because that measure did not violate his due process

rights.

          We addressed a similar claim that a petitioner’s constitutional rights were

violated when the state trial court required him to “wear a stun belt under his

clothes during the resentencing trial without holding a new evidentiary hearing to

determine whether the restraint was necessary” in Nance v. Warden, Georgia

Diagnostic Prison, 922 F.3d 1298, 1303 (11th Cir. 2019), cert. denied sub nom.

Nance v. Ford, 140 S. Ct. 2520 (2020). We explained in Nance that the Georgia

Supreme Court’s decision could not have been contrary to or an unreasonable

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application of clearly established law because no Supreme Court case was on

point: “[t]he Supreme Court has never addressed whether and under what

circumstances a trial court may require a defendant to wear a stun belt.” Id. at

1304. Commenting on the same three Supreme Court decisions Raheem relies on

here, we noted that they “all involve visible security restraints and the unique

constitutional problems they present -- namely, the impact that they have on the

jury’s perception of the defendant and the public’s perception of the judicial

process.” Id. (emphasis in original); see Deck v. Missouri, 544 U.S. 622, 630–33

(2005); Holbrook v. Flynn, 475 U.S. 560, 569 (1986); Illinois v. Allen, 397 U.S.

337, 343–44 (1970). “[V]isibility of the security measure at issue was central to

the reasoning of all three of those decisions, and the Court limited its holdings

accordingly.” Nance, 922 F.3d at 1304. In Deck, for example, the Supreme Court

held that “the Constitution forbids the use of visible shackles during the penalty

phase, as it forbids their use during the guilt phase, unless that use is justified by an

essential state interest -- such as the interest in courtroom security -- specific to the

defendant on trial.” 544 U.S. at 624 (quotations omitted, emphasis omitted).

      In finding that Raheem’s stun belt was not visible to the jury, the state

habeas court quoted from the Georgia Supreme Court decision in Nance, defining a

stun belt: “[u]nlike shackles, it is worn under the prisoner’s clothes and is not

visible to the jury.” See Nance v. State, 623 S.E.2d 470, 473 (Ga. 2005). This

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definition, the state habeas court found, conformed with Crumbley’s testimony that

the stun belt was a “battery pack thing that he wore, that was under his clothing,”

(emphasis added). We accept this factual determination. Raheem has not rebutted

it. Therefore, the trial court could not have violated Raheem’s due process rights

by requiring him to wear a security measure that was not visible to the jury. Nor

was it contrary to or an unreasonable application of Strickland, nor based on an

unreasonable determination of the facts, for the state court to have concluded that

Raheem’s counsel were not ineffective for failing to raise a stun belt due process

claim.

         The state habeas court’s decision also was consonant with Deck when it

found that the use of the stun belt was proper under the circumstances of Raheem’s

case. In Deck, the Supreme Court provided an exception to its holding concerning

visible shackles -- when the trial court determines, “in the exercise of its

discretion,” that a state interest specific to the particular trial justifies the shackles.

544 U.S. at 629. This determination may “take into account the factors that courts

have traditionally relied on in gauging potential security problems and the risk of

escape at trial.” Id. The state habeas court made this connection in Raheem’s

case:

         The record establishes that [Raheem] has been charged with the violent
         murder of Miriam and Brandon Hollis. In addition, the State elicited
         testimony during the sentencing phase of trial that jailers had searched
         [Raheem’s] jail cell and found a shank, razor blade and a detailed map
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      of the jail that was to be used in an escape attempt. Furthermore, the
      State presented evidence that [Raheem] had threatened to kill one of the
      jailers at the Henry County Sheriff’s Office.

The use of the stun belt was tied to the particular circumstances of Raheem’s case.

      Raheem argues in the alternative that even if the stun belt was not visible,

the jury became aware of it through two other prejudicially ineffective errors by his

counsel. First, Raheem claims that counsel were ineffective for failing to warn him

not to stand when he stood up during his mother’s testimony at the penalty phase,

the stun belt began to beep, and he turned to a guard and said, “go ahead and shock

me.” Raheem also says that Crumbley himself ineffectively and prejudicially told

the jurors about the stun belt in his closing argument at sentencing. Each argument

was addressed by the state habeas court, which found neither deficient

performance nor prejudice for either alleged error. Unlike the due process claim,

Strickland requires finding both ineffectiveness and prejudice.

      First, Raheem says the jurors became aware of the stun belt when his mother

took the stand during the penalty phase. Her testimony began with “Mustafa is my

baby,” she became emotional, and Raheem stood up and said, “get off the stand.”

At that point, because he stood, the stun belt was activated and began to beep. The

state habeas court noted, however, that the trial transcript did not reflect that

Raheem said “[g]o ahead and shock me” and there was no evidence to support a

finding that the jurors actually heard the stun belt being activated or Raheem’s

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alleged comment. Raheem has not rebutted the presumption of correctness as to

those factual findings -- the trial transcript does not reflect the comment, which by

itself suggests it was not audible enough for the court reporter, or possibly the

jurors to hear it. Raheem’s counsel was sitting right next to him, so just because he

heard the comment does not mean everyone in the courtroom heard it. With those

unrebutted findings, the state habeas court’s decision was not based on an

unreasonable determination of the facts, nor was it contrary to or an unreasonable

application of clearly established law.

      Raheem next claims that Crumbley performed ineffectively when he made

these closing remarks at sentencing:

      You need to understand that [Raheem] is not a threat any longer. The
      Sheriff has had him locked up for almost two years. He is in chains, or
      wearing an electric shock belt, as he is today, everywhere he goes. He
      has talked some, but he hasn’t done a single violent thing since he has
      been in jail. He is headed for the state prison system, into maximum
      security, into a setting which is far more sophisticated and severe in its
      security measures than the Henry County jail. It is not at all likely that
      he’ll ever hurt anyone else in that setting. There’s no reason any longer
      to be afraid of him and there’s no reason to kill him. Killing him will
      just demean us.

Raheem says that telling the jurors he was wearing a stun belt was prejudicially

ineffective because it was like telling the jurors that he is dangerous. But the state

court concluded that this closing argument “was not unreasonable in light of

counsel’s theory of no future dangerousness.”

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      As we’ve described, the prosecution relied heavily on future dangerousness

in its sentencing phase presentation. It called prison officials who described death

threats Raheem had made and the discovery of weapons and an escape plan in his

cell. In response, defense counsel argued that Raheem was not actually a danger,

nor would he be one, because the security measures surrounding him were

comprehensive and tight. Raheem has not established that counsel’s strategy was

an unreasonable one. Ultimately, the state court’s findings were neither contrary to

nor an unreasonable application of clearly established Supreme Court law.

      The state habeas court also concluded that counsel’s remark was not

prejudicial, finding “no reasonable probability that had trial counsel not referenced

the stun belt in closing argument the result of Petitioner’s sentencing would have

been different.” We agree. We already have detailed the powerful evidence

surrounding these brutal murders. Beyond that, because the state had relied so

heavily on evidence of future dangerousness, counsel’s comment about the stun

belt plainly was aimed at communicating to the jury that adequate security

measures were in place and they had no reason to fear him. This determination

was not contrary to or an unreasonable application of clearly established Supreme

Court law.

                                         VI.

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      Raheem also raises several claims of prosecutorial misconduct. His first one

attacks comments the prosecutor made to the jury during closing arguments at

sentencing. As with the stun belt claims, Raheem’s claim that “the State made

misleading, improper and unconstitutional closing arguments at both the

guilt/innocence phase and sentencing phase” was not raised at trial or on direct

review, and therefore was procedurally defaulted. See Black, 336 S.E.2d at 755.

So Raheem argues now -- as he must -- that ineffective assistance of counsel

provides cause to overcome the procedural default, claiming that his counsel

unreasonably failed to object to the comments the district attorney made during

closing arguments. See Ledford, 975 F.3d at 1160–61. We again conclude that the

state habeas court’s rejection of Raheem’s ineffective assistance claim was not

contrary to or an unreasonable application of Strickland, nor was it based on an

unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented.

      According to Raheem, the district attorney improperly drew on his own

expertise as a prosecutor to argue to the jury that he knew that people escape from

prison, and that Raheem would be a threat if he escaped. The prosecutor invoked

his own position and expertise, Raheem reasons, by repeatedly using the pronoun

“I,” in statements such as “I filed a notice of intent to seek the death penalty,” and

“I made the decision to seek the death penalty,” (emphasis added). The state

habeas court found that Raheem’s counsel were not deficient in failing to object to

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the use of the pronoun “I,” but that in any event, there was no reasonable

probability that if trial counsel objected, Raheem would not have been convicted or

sentenced to die. The court observed that the prosecutor was “merely making a

proper assertion that the State had sought the death penalty in Petitioner’s case and

had given proper notice to Petitioner,” and it was undisputed that the prosecutor

had sought the death penalty. We cannot conclude that this determination was

contrary to or an unreasonable application of clearly established law, nor that it

amounted to an unreasonable determination of the facts.

      The prosecutor then commented on the unconsummated escape plan found

in Raheem’s cell, arguing, “I’ll bet you one thing, I’ll bet you he hasn’t given up.”

Raheem says the prosecutor again improperly drew on his own position and

expertise by positing, “Whether he’s smart enough to do it, I don’t know. There

have been folks that have, I know that,” (emphasis added). “It has long been held

that a prosecutor may argue both facts in evidence and reasonable inferences from

those facts.” Tucker v. Kemp, 762 F.2d 1496, 1506 (11th Cir. 1985). After

introducing evidence to the jury about the jail map and contraband found in

Raheem’s cell at trial, the prosecutor’s suggestion that Raheem would try to escape

was not an unreasonable one. Moreover, the brief statement that people do escape

from prison, a known fact, does not impermissibly inject evidence into the record.

Nor, for that matter, has the Petitioner established prejudiced. The state habeas

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court’s determination that the prosecutor’s use of the “I” pronoun “clearly does not

constitute error,” was not contrary to or an unreasonable application of clearly

established law, nor was it based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in

light of the evidence presented.

      Raheem next challenges this statement from the prosecutor: “This man is

just mean, ladies and gentlemen, in just plain, old country English, he’s mean.

He’s cold-hearted. He’s cold-blooded. And let me tell you something, he’ll kill

you. And I’m not having to guess.” The state habeas court held that the

prosecutor’s future dangerous argument -- as a whole -- was not improper because

the prosecutor made a “reasonable deduction from the evidence in suggesting that

[Raheem] would pose a future danger based on the evidence presented at the

sentencing phase of trial,” and that Raheem failed to establish that trial counsel

were deficient or that he was prejudiced by the prosecutor’s arguments.

      Reviewing this determination, the district court described the prosecutor’s

comment as “very troubling,” noting that if the jurors heard the prosecutor’s

comment “as articulating a specific threat to them, it was so highly improper it

could potentially impermissibly taint the proceedings.” The court said, however,

that “[o]n a cold record . . . it is not possible to determine with certitude whether

the Prosecutor was using ‘you’ to mean the jurors, or using it to suggest general

future dangerousness.” Applying the double deference mandated by AEDPA, the

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district court found “some support” for the state habeas court’s holding that

defense counsel’s performance was not deficient in failing to object. The district

court also agreed with the state habeas court that Raheem was not prejudiced by

the comment, especially since Crumbley addressed it in his closing argument.

      We need not and do not reach the question whether defense counsel were

deficient for failing to object to the prosecutor’s comment, although we readily

accept that it likely was erroneous for the prosecutor to tell the jury that Raheem

will “kill you” and for defense counsel not to object. Nevertheless, considering the

full record before the jury, we are satisfied that Raheem cannot establish that he

was prejudiced by defense counsel’s failure to object to the prosecutor’s comment.

See Dallas, 964 F.3d at 1306 (“A court may decline to reach the performance

prong of the ineffective assistance test if convinced that the prejudice prong cannot

be satisfied.”) (quotations omitted).

      As we have seen, the state offered overwhelming evidence, including strong

evidence concerning Raheem’s future dangerousness. And although defense

counsel did not object to the prosecutor’s remark at the time it was made, as the

district court noted, Crumbley addressed it in his closing argument:

      Fear is our real enemy here. It’s the State’s ally. That’s why Mr. Floyd
      [the prosecutor] got up close to you and yelled at you that we know one
      thing for sure, and that is that he’ll kill you. [Raheem] is responsible
      for getting all that fear started, but you can stop it. The State wants you
      to give in to it.

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On this record, the state court’s finding that Raheem was not prejudiced by his

counsel’s failure to object at the time this comment was made was not contrary to

or an unreasonable application of clearly established law, nor was it based on an

unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented. As a

result, Raheem’s claims of prosecutorial misconduct remain procedurally

defaulted.

                                         VII.

      Finally, Raheem claims that it was contrary to or an unreasonable

application of clearly established law for the Georgia Supreme Court to have

concluded, on direct review, that the prosecutor’s violation of Raheem’s Fifth

Amendment rights by commenting on his failure to testify was harmless beyond a

reasonable doubt. We disagree.

      In closing argument, the prosecutor said: “Raheem didn’t take the stand but

you heard his video taped statement. And I submit to you that it ain’t true.”

Raheem’s counsel immediately moved for a mistrial. The trial court denied the

motion for a mistrial, explaining:

      I don’t know that it is a comment on his failure to take [the stand]. I
      took it as how that information was coming from him. I certainly think
      it would have been better left unsaid. But I don’t take it to be any
      argument, for instance, that they should hold that against him that he
      failed to take the stand. It was mainly pointing out to the jury the source
      of the evidence you were about to tell them about, it was a video tape.

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The trial judge then declined the prosecutor’s suggestion that he give a curative

instruction, relying instead on the general instruction at the close of the evidence

that the jury was not permitted to draw any negative inference from the defendant’s

failure to testify.

       The Georgia Supreme Court concluded that the constitutional rule that “a

prosecutor may not make any comment upon a criminal defendant’s failure to

testify at trial” was violated in Raheem’s case. It nevertheless found the violation

harmless beyond a reasonable doubt:

       [U]pon considering the firsthand observation of the trial court that the
       comment in question did not appear designed to or likely to urge any
       negative inference, the strength of the evidence against the defendant,
       the charge given to the jury by the trial court, and the context in which
       the comment was made, this Court concludes that the violation here
       was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.

Raheem, 560 S.E.2d at 685.

       Raheem’s claim is based on the Supreme Court ruling in Griffin v.

California, 380 U.S. 609 (1965), which held that the Fifth Amendment privilege

against self-incrimination “forbids either comment by the prosecution on the

accused’s silence or instructions by the court that such silence is evidence of guilt.”

Id. at 615. However, in Chapman v. California, 386 U.S. 18 (1967), the Supreme

Court clarified that Griffin violations are subject to harmless error review,

explaining that “before a federal constitutional error can be held harmless, the

court must be able to declare a belief that it was harmless beyond a reasonable
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doubt.” Id. at 24. That is exactly what the Georgia Supreme Court did here: it

found a Griffin violation, but held, under Chapman, that the violation was harmless

beyond a reasonable doubt. Raheem, 560 S.E.2d at 685.

       In § 2254 proceedings, a federal court must assess the prejudicial impact of

an alleged constitutional error in a state-court criminal trial under the standard set

forth in Brecht v. Abrahamson, 507 U.S. 619 (1993), which asks whether an error

had a “‘substantial and injurious effect or influence’” on the jury’s verdict,

regardless of whether the state appellate court applied the “‘harmless beyond a

reasonable doubt’ standard set forth in Chapman.” Fry v. Pliler, 551 U.S. 112,

116, 121–22 (2007). As the Supreme Court explained in Brecht, “collateral review

is different from direct review,” and, therefore, “an error that may justify reversal

on direct appeal will not necessarily support a collateral attack on a final

judgment.” 507 U.S. at 633–34 (quotations omitted).

       Applying Brecht here, Raheem’s claim fails. The prosecutor’s comment

was made in passing to explain the videotaped testimony; the evidence of

Raheem’s guilt was overwhelming; and the trial court clearly instructed the jury

that it was barred from drawing any inference from Raheem’s failure to testify. 8

8
  The trial court instructed the jury this way: “[T]he defendant in a criminal case is under no duty
to produce any evidence tending to prove innocence and is not required to take the stand and
testify in the case. If the defendant elects not to testify, no inference hurtful, harmful, or adverse
to the defendant shall be drawn by the jury, nor shall such fact be held against the defendant in
any way.” Raheem, 560 S.E.2d at 685.
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There is no way to conclude from the record that this passing comment, in context,

had a “substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s

verdict.” See Brecht, 507 U.S. at 623. Accordingly, Raheem cannot succeed on

this claim either.

                                        ***

      At the end of the day, we hold that the district court properly denied

Raheem’s § 2254 habeas petition and AFFIRM its judgment.

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