Wydell Evans v. Secretary, DOC ( 2013 )


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  •               Case: 10-14920    Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 1 of 72
    [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 10-14920
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 6:07-cv-00897-JA-KRS
    WYDELL EVANS,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    versus
    SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS,
    ATTORNEY GENERAL OF FLORIDA,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Florida
    ________________________
    (January 4, 2013)
    Before DUBINA, Chief Judge, TJOFLAT, CARNES, BARKETT, HULL,
    MARCUS, WILSON, PRYOR, MARTIN and JORDAN, Circuit Judges.
    PRYOR, Circuit Judge:
    The issue in this appeal is whether a reasonable jurist could conclude that
    evidence of a capital murderer’s mental health problems, including antisocial
    personality disorder; his crack cocaine and alcohol abuse; his life of crime,
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    including drug dealing, robberies of drug dealers, and regular use of firearms; and
    his history of escalating violence, particularly toward women, was likely to be
    more harmful than helpful if introduced as mitigation during the penalty phase of
    his trial. Wydell Evans shot and killed his brother’s 17-year-old girlfriend, Angel
    Johnson, two days after being released from prison. During the penalty phase of
    Evans’s trial, the state presented evidence of his prior convictions, and Evans’s
    counsel presented evidence to portray his client in a positive light. The trial court
    followed the recommendation of the jury that Evans be sentenced to death. In state
    postconviction proceedings, Evans argued that his counsel had been
    constitutionally ineffective for failing to discover and introduce evidence that he
    had suffered a head injury at the age of three and had a long history of mental
    health and behavioral problems. Three mental health experts testified that Evans
    suffered from antisocial personality disorder. Lay witnesses also testified about
    Evans’s long history of violent behavior. For example, Evans’s brother, Oren
    Evans, testified that Evans was “the angriest, most aggressive person [he had] ever
    met” and recalled an occasion where Evans had searched for the mother of one of
    his children only to take her home and “beat[] her up and all type of stuff.” And
    one of Evans’s former teachers stated that she was not “surprised or shocked”
    when she heard that Evans had murdered someone; she was only “surprised it
    [had]n’t happen[ed] sooner.” The state trial court ruled that Evans’s claim of
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    ineffective assistance of counsel failed, and the Supreme Court of Florida affirmed
    on the ground that Evans had failed to prove prejudice because his postconviction
    evidence of mitigation was more harmful than helpful. Because that decision is
    reasonable, we affirm the denial of Evans’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
    I. BACKGROUND
    We divide our discussion of the background of this appeal into four sections.
    First, we discuss the evidence introduced in the guilt phase of Evans’s trial.
    Second, we discuss the evidence introduced in the penalty phase of Evans’s trial.
    Third, we discuss Evans’s postconviction challenges to his sentence in state court.
    Fourth, we discuss the procedural history of Evans’s petition for a writ of habeas
    corpus.
    A. Guilt Phase
    During the guilt phase, the state presented evidence that Evans’s crime had
    been premeditated. While incarcerated for an earlier parole violation, Evans had
    engaged in a heated argument with his brother’s 17-year-old girlfriend, Angel
    Johnson, over the phone and told another prisoner that “[i]f I could get my hands
    on [Johnson,] I’ll kill that bitch.” Two days after being released from prison,
    Evans shot and killed Johnson.
    The shooting occurred in a car occupied by Johnson, Evans, Lino Odenat,
    Sammy Hogan, and Erica Foster. The group first stopped for gas. Evans
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    instructed the driver, Hogan, not to stop at the first two gas stations they visited
    because “too many police” were patrolling the area.
    Shortly after leaving the gas station, Johnson and Evans began to argue
    about Johnson’s alleged unfaithfulness to Evans’s brother, Oren. When Hogan
    intervened to tell Evans that Johnson was not cheating on his brother, Evans
    instructed Hogan to stay out of the argument and punched the windshield of the car
    with sufficient force to crack the windshield. Evans told Johnson, “You’re not
    going to cheat on my brother like my girlfriend cheated on me.” At some point
    during the argument, Johnson laughed. Evans responded, “You think it’s funny?
    You think it’s funny?” Evans then pulled out a gun and pointed it at Johnson.
    Johnson put her hands up and said, “Alright, Wydell, Alright.” Despite Johnson’s
    pleading, Evans shot Johnson in the chest.
    Johnson fell into Foster’s lap and said, “Wydell, you shot me for real. You
    shot me for real.” Johnson began gasping for air and Odenat tried to roll down a
    window to give her some air. Evans ordered Odenat not to roll down the window
    and stated, “That bitch is dead. She’s dead.” Immediately after shooting Johnson,
    Evans began threatening the other passengers in the car with the gun and telling
    them that he would kill them if they told anyone that he had killed Johnson. Evans
    then ordered Hogan to drive the car to the home of his friend, Jerry Davis.
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    Evans told Davis that he “missed and shot the girl” and asked Davis if he
    could borrow some money. Davis gave Evans $40, and Evans returned to the car.
    Evans ordered Hogan to drive to a nearby parking lot. There Evans warned Foster
    and Hogan that, if they told anyone that he had shot Johnson, he would kill them,
    and he would “get the whole family.” Evans told them that he was “dead-ass
    serious” and “swore on his grandma’s grave” and “to God.” He warned, “If I go to
    jail I’m going to get out because I’ve done something like this before and I’ve got
    out before.” He then tried to wipe his fingerprints from the car before allowing
    Foster and Hogan to take Johnson to the hospital. Despite Evans’s threats, both
    Foster and Hogan eventually identified Evans as Johnson’s killer. Evans was
    indicted for first-degree premeditated murder, kidnapping, and aggravated assault.
    Evans testified that he had found the gun in the front seat of the car and that
    the gun had accidentally discharged when he tried to hand it to Johnson in the back
    seat. He also testified that, although he was “slightly intoxicated” on the night that
    he shot Johnson, he had a “clear recollection of what happened” and “knew what
    was going on” at the time. He conceded that, when he shot Johnson, he was
    “perfectly aware of everything” and “functioning fine.” A Florida jury convicted
    Evans of all three counts. See Evans v. State, 
    838 So. 2d 1090
    , 1092 (Fla. 2002).
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    B. Penalty Phase
    During the penalty phase, the state proved that Evans had two previous
    convictions for battery upon a law enforcement officer, a previous conviction for
    aggravated battery, and that Evans was on probation for felony possession of a
    firearm and escape when he shot Johnson. Evans’s previous convictions were
    uncontested. Indeed, Evans testified about three violent felonies that he
    committed.
    Evans’s counsel presented evidence of Evans’s positive characteristics.
    Several character witnesses described Evans “as a generous man, a good father, a
    loving and obedient son and grandson, a good friend, and someone who counseled
    children to stay out of trouble by staying in school.” Evans v. State, 
    946 So. 2d 1
    ,
    4 (Fla. 2006). Evans’s mother, Lilly Evans, testified that his father had died when
    Evans was three years old, that she had been addicted to crack cocaine during part
    of his childhood, that her addiction had contributed to his downfall, and that he had
    been her inspiration to stop abusing the drug.
    Several witnesses testified about Evans’s upbringing and his supportive
    relationship with some of his family members, particularly his grandmother. Lilly
    admitted that, although she left her son in his grandmother’s care for a period of
    time, he had never been deprived physically of anything; he had always had a
    home in which to live and food to eat; and he had been a “normal” and “obedient”
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    child who had received “okay grades.” Lilly also testified that Evans was close to
    the five children he had with different women and that the mother of one of his
    children had died. Evans’s cousin, Minnie Jarrett, testified that Evans’s
    grandmother raised Evans when his mother was unable to care for him; that his
    grandmother was a “very religious Christian woman” who “maintained that aspect
    of her life within her household”; and that his grandmother was a “[v]ery loving
    and caring woman” who provided Evans with “the things that he needed, love and
    support and the material things that he needed.” According to Jarrett, Evans’s
    grandmother “treated [Evans] like [] he was her own son.” A family friend, Linda
    Key, agreed that Evans had been part of a “loving family” and had been “provided
    support emotionally, financially, everything.” Evans’s aunt, Sandra Evans,
    testified that Evans had helped in the care of his grandmother after his grandmother
    had a stroke. Evans had even changed his grandmother’s diapers and had paid
    Sandra’s bills while Sandra was caring for his grandmother.
    Evans testified about his criminal history. He admitted that, although he had
    been hurt by his mother’s cocaine addiction, her addiction had not caused him to
    “los[e] control of [his] identity.” He testified that he had dropped out of school not
    because his mother had failed to take care of him, but “[b]ecause [he] was engaged
    in crime. [He] was out there, you know, as they say these days, thuddin’. [He]
    was doing what a lot of other teenagers do.” Evans also testified about his history
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    of incarceration and some of the details of his crimes. Evans admitted that he was
    first imprisoned at age 17 and released at age 18. Within seven to nine months
    after his release, Evans committed another crime for which he returned to prison
    for two years. After Evans was released again, he committed another crime and
    was incarcerated for two and a half to three years. Evans admitted that one of his
    previous crimes involved him “jump[ing] on some dude on a motorcycle.”
    Another conviction related to an occasion where Evans injured an “officer in the
    throat.” And yet another conviction involved him “kick[ing] [an] officer in his . . .
    private area.” Following Evans’s last conviction before this appeal, he was out of
    prison for about a year before he was incarcerated again for a parole violation.
    Then, after being out of prison for two days, Evans shot Johnson. See 
    id. at 3.
    No evidence of Evans’s mental health was presented during the penalty
    phase. While preparing for the penalty phase, Evans’s attorney had read a
    presentencing report in which Evans had reported that his mental health was
    perfect and that he had seen a psychologist only as a youth. Neither side presented
    any evidence that Evans suffered from a mental disorder.
    The jury recommended a sentence of death by a vote of ten to two, and the
    trial court sentenced Evans to death for the first-degree murder conviction. The
    trial court found two aggravating circumstances: (1) Evans had previously been
    convicted of violent felonies, Fla. Stat. § 921.141(5)(b), and (2) the crime was
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    committed while Evans was on probation, 
    id. § 921.141(5)(a).
    See Evans, 
    946 So. 2d
    at 4. The trial court did not find any statutory mitigators, but found five
    nonstatutory mitigators: “(1) Evans experienced an abused or deprived childhood;
    (2) he contributed to society; (3) he performed charitable deeds; (4) he counseled
    youth to avoid crime and stay in school; and (5) he exhibited good behavior in
    prison.” 
    Id. at 5
    n.3. The Supreme Court of Florida affirmed Evans’s convictions
    and death sentence on direct appeal, Evans v. State, 
    838 So. 2d 1090
    (Fla. 2002),
    and the Supreme Court of the United States denied his petition for a writ of
    certiorari, Evans v. Florida, 
    540 U.S. 846
    , 
    124 S. Ct. 121
    (2003).
    C. State Postconviction Proceedings
    Evans filed a motion for postconviction relief. The state trial court heard
    testimony from several lay witnesses and three mental health experts. Evans, 
    946 So. 2d
    at 5. Evans’s new mitigation evidence, in contrast with the evidence
    introduced in the penalty phase of his trial, presented a more troubled and violent
    history. The new evidence established that Evans had suffered a head injury when
    he was young, had experienced a troubled childhood, had abused alcohol and
    drugs, had suffered from poor impulse control, and had exhibited aggression,
    especially toward women.
    Evans had been hit by a car when he was three years old and sustained a
    “head injury.” Evans’s mother Lilly testified about how Evans’s speech and
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    language patterns had changed after the accident and how Evans had developed a
    “very, very bad stuttering problem.” Two experts, Dr. Richard Carpenter and Dr.
    Henry Dee, testified that Evans “had brain damage attributable to his head injury.”
    
    Id. at 7.
    The expert for the state, Dr. Harry McClaren, agreed. 
    Id. “Dr. Carpenter
    and Dr. Dee departed from Dr. McClaren over whether
    Evans’[s] brain damage led to any particular behavior.” 
    Id. at 7–8.
    Specifically,
    Dr. Carpenter and Dr. Dee believed that Evans “suffered from an uncontrollable
    rage reaction or impulse disorder as a result of the brain damage,” but Dr.
    McClaren “did not agree that Evans’[s] brain dysfunction led him to behave in any
    particular way.” 
    Id. at 8.
    Dr. McClaren testified that a “concussion” is a form of a
    closed head injury and is a “very common experience in life.”
    Dr. Carpenter and Dr. Dee also parted ways with Dr. McClaren about
    whether Evans met the criteria for the two statutory health mitigators, Fla. Stat. §§
    921.141(6)(b), (f). Both Dr. Carpenter and Dr. Dee testified that, because of his
    impulse disorder, “Evans was under the influence of extreme mental or emotional
    disturbance at the time of the offense and that Evans’[s] capacity to appreciate the
    criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law
    was substantially impaired at the time of the offense.” Evans, 
    946 So. 2d
    at 8. But
    Dr. McClaren “believed that Evans’[s] actions during the car ride and after the
    shooting indicated that Evans was in control of the situation and was making the
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    decisions in the car.” 
    Id. at 9.
    According to Dr. McClaren, Evans understood the
    criminality of his conduct and did not suffer from extreme mental or emotional
    disturbance when he killed Johnson. 
    Id. All three
    experts discussed how Evans had started to abuse alcohol at a
    young age. “Both Dr. Carpenter and Dr. McClaren characterized Evans as
    narcissistic and not wanting to admit anything that puts him in a bad light,” 
    id. at 7,
    and Dr. Carpenter explained that someone with a narcissistic personality is
    “someone who is very self-centered, a grandiose sense of themselves.” All three
    experts testified that Evans probably had antisocial personality disorder. Dr.
    Carpenter stated unequivocally that “[t]here is absolutely no doubt” about whether
    Evans had antisocial personality disorder, and Dr. McClaren agreed that “I don’t
    think there is much doubt [Evans] meets the criteria for [antisocial personality
    disorder].” Dr. Carpenter conceded that “in laymen’s terms . . . Wydell Evans is
    diagnosed as a bad dude who commits criminal acts when he’s drunk.” Dr.
    McClaren agreed that “alcohol consumption was a significant factor in some of
    [Evans’s] behavioral problems” and testified that Evans had used crack cocaine in
    the past.
    Evans also presented evidence of his long history of behavioral problems
    and aggression. Lilly contradicted her trial testimony that Evans had been an
    obedient child and stated instead that “he really [had been] disobedient to [her],
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    getting worse and worse.” Lilly also admitted that she knew that Evans had
    “got[ten] involved in drugs and the selling of crack cocaine” and had “carr[ied]
    guns” during his “teenage years.” Lilly testified that Evans had an “explosive
    temper.”
    Evans’s brother, Oren, testified that Evans “had a very bad temper problem”
    and described Evans as “the angriest, most aggressive person [he had] ever met.”
    Oren recounted how Evans had “slapped” two guys for disagreeing with him about
    who was a better basketball player, Michael Jordan or Scottie Pippen. About this
    incident, Oren testified that Evans “wanted to be like the man. He wanted to run
    the show. He was like king of the world, the hardest guy in the world, gangster.”
    Oren also testified that he had heard about incidents in which Evans threw rocks at
    a police officer and attacked teachers. He confirmed that Evans was “into guns”
    and was known to carry guns.
    Witnesses also testified about Evans’s history of violence toward women.
    Oren testified about an occasion in which Evans had tried to find the mother of one
    of his children. Evans rode “around town looking for her . . . . [H]e was kicking in
    doors looking for her. He was just swinging on people, fighting people.” When
    Evans finally found the woman after a three day search, he took her to his home
    and started “beating her up and all type of stuff.” The next day, when Oren urged
    Evans to stop beating the woman, Evans told Oren to “mind [his] own business”
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    and “pulled a gun on [him].” Oren testified that Evans had beaten up his other
    girlfriends too. One of the mental health experts reported that Evans had admitted
    that he had once “punched his wife in the mouth for calling him another man’s
    name.” Another expert testified that Evans had admitted that he had “struck” a
    “school aide” and “pushed” a teacher.
    Several witnesses testified about Evans’s escalating aggression while he was
    in school. When Evans was still in elementary school, he “was placed in a class
    for children with learning disabilities and received speech therapy.” 
    Id. at 6.
    One
    of the mental health experts testified that, based on his review of Evans’s school
    record, “his behavior got worse at around twelve and thirteen, which was
    associated with a number of changes in his life, including starting to use alcohol
    and starting to be involved in criminal activity.” Barbara McFadden, a high school
    teacher and counselor, testified that Evans had an average intelligence, but he had
    learning disabilities. She also testified that when she read in the newspaper that
    Evans was on trial for murder, she was not “surprised or shocked.” Instead, she
    was “surprised it [had]n’t happen[ed] sooner.”
    Margaret O’Shaughnessy, a retired counselor for special needs students,
    remembered Evans because she “felt with all [her] heart that [Evans] was capable
    of very great violence. It was like he was at a higher plane or level or more
    disturbed than the other students that we had in the emotional education.”
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    O’Shaughnessy recounted two incidents in which Evans had attacked a student and
    a teacher. In one incident, he had attacked a female student while she boarded a
    school bus, and in the other incident, he had pushed a female teacher who had
    reported him for misbehavior. O’Shaughnessy testified that, at some point, Evans
    had been “classified as emotionally handicapped and [] recommended for the
    severely emotionally disturbed program in high school, a program for the most
    violent students.” 
    Id. at 7.
    The postconviction evidence also provided new details about Evans’s
    criminal activities. The evidence established that Evans had dropped out of school
    at age 16 and that, by that time, he had “already begun to establish a criminal
    record involving violent crimes.” 
    Id. By the
    time he was 28 years old, “he had
    served eight to nine years in prison and juvenile detention facilities, and was on
    probation for two separate felony convictions.” 
    Id. (footnote omitted).
    At the
    evidentiary hearing, Evans bragged that he was a “jack boy” because he “rob[bed]
    drug dealers” and that he only felt “ready” when he had a gun strapped on.
    After the trial court weighed all of this evidence, it ruled that Evans had not
    proved that he was prejudiced by his trial counsel’s failure to discover and present
    the evidence offered during the evidentiary hearing. The Supreme Court of Florida
    identified Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    (1984), as
    providing the applicable standard and affirmed the decision of the state trial court.
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    The state supreme court declined to address whether defense counsel’s failure to
    present the additional evidence of mitigation was deficient performance because
    “Evans . . . failed to demonstrate that he was prejudiced.” Evans, 
    946 So. 2d
    at
    12.
    The Supreme Court of Florida explained that much of the additional
    mitigation evidence presented a “double-edged sword” because the evidence
    “would likely have been more harmful than helpful” or the evidence would have
    opened the door to damaging evidence:
    Evans has failed to establish prejudice because the mitigation
    evidence he presented at the evidentiary hearing would likely have
    been more harmful than helpful. “An ineffective assistance claim
    does not arise from the failure to present mitigation evidence where
    that evidence presents a double-edged sword.” Reed v. State, 
    875 So. 2d
    415, 437 (Fla. 2004). While the testimony presented at the
    evidentiary hearing established that Evans suffered from mental health
    problems, it also displayed a long history of behavioral problems and
    escalating violence throughout his school career. Presenting this
    evidence at the penalty phase would have resulted in the jury hearing
    about Evans’ aggression towards students and teachers, his aggression
    towards police officers, his pride in being known as a “jack-boy”
    because he robs drug dealers, and his habit of carrying a gun. It is just
    as likely that this evidence would have been more “aggravating” than
    mitigating. See Reed, 
    875 So. 2d
    at 436–37 (denying ineffective
    assistance claim because “even if [defense] counsel had . . .
    investigated further, the testimony that could have been presented was
    just as likely to have resulted in aggravation against rather than
    mitigation for [the defendant]”).
    Evans, 
    946 So. 2d
    at 13. The Supreme Court of Florida explained also that the
    mental health opinion evidence that Evans had been unable to control his actions
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    when he killed Johnson was contradicted by Evans’s own testimony at the guilt
    phase of his trial that “he had a ‘clear recollection’ of the shooting because he was
    focused and in control.” 
    Id. The court
    concluded that “Evans ha[d] not established
    that there is a reasonable probability that his sentence would have been different
    had counsel discovered and presented the mitigation evidence Evans presented at
    the evidentiary hearing.” 
    Id. D. Federal
    Habeas Corpus Proceedings
    Evans timely filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the district court.
    The petition raised fifteen claims, including a claim that trial counsel was
    ineffective during the penalty phase. The district court “agree[d]” with the
    Supreme Court of Florida that Evans “had not established prejudice.” Evans v.
    Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr., No. 6:07-CV-897-orl-28KRS, 
    2010 WL 3834760
    , *16
    (M.D. Fla. Sept. 29, 2010). The district court explained that the state supreme
    court “address[ed] the new mitigating evidence in its opinion, and found that
    although the evidence established [Evans] suffered from mental health problems,
    the evidence also showed a history of escalating violence.” 
    Id. at *18.
    The district
    court agreed with the Supreme Court of Florida that “additional evidence presented
    at the post-conviction evidentiary hearing would have furthered the view that
    [Evans] was merely a violent person who had a history of threatening and hitting
    other people, especially women.” 
    Id. at *17.
    The district court reasoned that the
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    potential mitigating effect of the evidence that Evans had “suffered from a head
    injury that may have triggered an impulse control disorder is outweighed by the
    numerous accounts of violent conduct on the part of [Evans] and the fact that
    [Evans] testified that he knew what he was doing and was in control when the
    shooting occurred.” 
    Id. at *18.
    The district court denied the petition because it
    could not “say that the state court’s application of the Strickland prejudice standard
    was objectively unreasonable.” 
    Id. at *19.
    Evans appealed the judgment of the
    district court.
    A panel of this Court vacated the decision of the district court and remanded
    the case with instructions to grant the writ of habeas corpus as to the claim of
    ineffective assistance of counsel during the penalty phase. Evans v. Sec’y, Dep’t
    of Corr., 
    681 F.3d 1241
    (11th Cir. 2012). After Florida filed a petition for
    rehearing, we vacated the panel decision and ordered rehearing en banc. Evans v.
    Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr., 
    686 F.3d 1321
    (11th Cir. 2012). We directed the parties to
    brief and argue one issue: whether Evans is entitled to a writ of habeas corpus
    because his counsel failed, in the penalty phase, to present the mitigating evidence
    that Evans presented on state collateral review.
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “Under [the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996], a
    federal court may not grant a habeas corpus application ‘with respect to any claim
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    that was adjudicated on the merits in State court proceedings,’ 28 U.S.C. §
    2254(d), 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,’ § 2254(d)(1).” Johnson v. Upton, 
    615 F.3d 1318
    , 1329 (11th Cir. 2010) (quoting Berghuis v. Thompkins, --- U.S. ---, 130 S.
    Ct. 2250, 2259 (2010). “The Supreme Court has described this standard as ‘a
    highly deferential’ one that ‘demands that state-court decisions be given the benefit
    of the doubt.’” 
    Id. (quoting Renico
    v. Lett, 559 U.S. ---, 
    130 S. Ct. 1855
    , 1862
    (2010). The decision of a state court is not “contrary to” federal law unless it
    “contradicts the United States Supreme Court on a settled question of law or holds
    differently than did that Court on a set of materially indistinguishable facts.”
    Cummings v. Sec’y for Dep’t of Corr., 
    588 F.3d 1331
    , 1355 (11th Cir. 2009)
    (quoting Kimbrough v. Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr., Fla., 
    565 F.3d 796
    , 799 (11th Cir.
    2009)). The decision of a state court is not an “unreasonable application” of
    federal law unless the state court “identifies the correct governing legal principle as
    articulated by the United States Supreme Court, but unreasonably applies that
    principle to the facts of the petitioner’s case, unreasonably extends the principle to
    a new context where it should not apply, or unreasonably refuses to extend it to a
    new context where it should apply.” 
    Id. (quoting Kimbrough,
    565 F.3d at 799).
    “The question under [the Act] is not whether a federal court believes the state
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    court’s determination was correct but whether that determination was
    unreasonable—a substantially higher threshold.” 
    Id. (quoting Schriro
    v.
    Landrigan, 
    550 U.S. 465
    , 473, 
    127 S. Ct. 1933
    , 1939 (2007)).
    The Supreme Court has held that “an unreasonable application of federal law
    is different from an incorrect application of federal law.” Harrington v. Richter, ---
    U.S. ---, 
    131 S. Ct. 770
    , 785 (2011) (quoting Williams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 362
    ,
    410, 
    120 S. Ct. 1495
    , 1522 (2000)). “To obtain habeas relief ‘a state prisoner
    must show that the state court’s ruling on the claim being presented in the federal
    court was so lacking in justification that there was an error well understood and
    comprehended in existing law beyond any possibility for fairminded
    disagreement.’” Reese v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 
    675 F.3d 1277
    , 1286 (11th
    Cir. 2012) (quoting 
    Richter, 131 S. Ct. at 786
    –87). When evaluating a state
    prisoner’s petition, “a habeas court must determine what arguments or theories
    supported or, [if none were stated], could have supported[] the state court’s
    decision; and then it must ask whether it is possible that fairminded jurists could
    disagree that those arguments or theories are inconsistent with the holding in a
    prior decision of [the Supreme Court].” 
    Id. at 1286–87
    (quoting 
    Richter, 131 S. Ct. at 786
    ).
    The Supreme Court has also been clear that “[e]valuating whether a rule
    application was unreasonable requires considering the rule’s specificity. The more
    19
    Case: 10-14920      Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 20 of 72
    general the rule, the more leeway courts have in reaching outcomes in case-by-case
    determinations.” 
    Richter, 131 S. Ct. at 786
    (quoting Yarborough v. Alvarado, 
    541 U.S. 652
    , 664, 
    124 S. Ct. 2140
    , 2149 (2004)). “The Strickland standard is a
    general one, so the range of reasonable applications is substantial.” Premo v.
    Moore, --- U.S. ---, 
    131 S. Ct. 733
    , 740 (2011) (quoting 
    Richter, 131 S. Ct. at 788
    ).
    III. DISCUSSION
    To prevail on his claim that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance
    during the penalty phase, Evans must establish “both that trial counsel’s
    ‘performance was deficient, and that the deficiency prejudiced the defense’” during
    the penalty phase. Ponticelli v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 
    690 F.3d 1271
    , 1294
    (11th Cir. 2012) (quoting Wiggins v. Smith, 
    539 U.S. 510
    , 521, 
    123 S. Ct. 2527
    ,
    2535 (2003)). But if we conclude that the Supreme Court of Florida reasonably
    applied clearly established federal law when it decided that Evans had failed to
    establish prejudice, we may affirm the denial of Evans’s petition without
    addressing whether the performance of his counsel was deficient. As the Supreme
    Court has explained, “If it is easier to dispose of an ineffectiveness claim on the
    ground of lack of sufficient prejudice, which we expect will often be so, that
    course should be followed.” 
    Strickland 466 U.S. at 697
    , 104 S. Ct at 2069.
    To establish prejudice, a petitioner must “show[] that counsel’s errors were
    so serious as to deprive the defendant of a fair trial.” 
    Id. at 687,
    104 S. Ct. at 2064.
    20
    Case: 10-14920      Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 21 of 72
    Prejudice is established when “there is a reasonable probability that, but for
    counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
    different.” 
    Id. at 694,
    104 S. Ct. at 2068. “When a [petitioner] challenges a death
    sentence . . . , the question is whether there is a reasonable probability that, absent
    the errors, the sentencer—including an appellate court, to the extent it
    independently reweighs the evidence—would have concluded that the balance of
    aggravating and mitigating circumstances did not warrant death.” 
    Id. at 695,
    104
    S. Ct. at 2069. “A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine
    confidence in the outcome.” 
    Id. at 694,
    104 S. Ct. at 2068. The difference
    between the reasonable probability standard “and a more-probable-than-not
    standard is slight and matters ‘only in the rarest case.’” 
    Richter, 131 S. Ct. at 792
    (quoting 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 697
    , 104 S. Ct. at 2069). “The likelihood of a
    different result must be substantial, not just conceivable.” 
    Id. at 792.
    In
    determining whether there is a reasonable probability of a different result, “we
    consider ‘the totality of the available mitigation evidence—both that adduced at
    trial, and the evidence adduced in the habeas proceeding’—and ‘reweig[h] it
    against the evidence in aggravation.’” Porter v. McCollum, 
    558 U.S. 30
    , 130 S.
    Ct. 447, 453–54 (2011) (quoting 
    Williams, 529 U.S. at 397
    –98, 120 S. Ct. at
    1515).
    21
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 22 of 72
    The Supreme Court of Florida reasonably applied Strickland when it ruled
    that Evans had failed to establish prejudice. The Supreme Court of Florida
    correctly identified Strickland as the controlling federal law and concluded that
    Evans could not establish prejudice under Strickland because the mitigation
    evidence was a “double-edged sword,” Evans, 
    946 So. 2d
    at 13 (quoting Reed, 
    875 So. 2d
    at 437), that “would likely have been more harmful than helpful,” 
    id. That conclusion
    was reasonable in the light of recent decisions of the Supreme Court
    holding that prejudice had not been established when evidence offered in
    mitigation was not clearly mitigating or would have opened the door to powerful
    rebuttal evidence, see Cullen v. Pinholster, --- U.S. ---, 
    131 S. Ct. 1388
    (2011);
    Wong v. Belmontes, 
    558 U.S. 15
    , 
    130 S. Ct. 383
    (2009), as well as our several
    decisions holding that it is reasonable to conclude that a defendant was not
    prejudiced when his mitigation evidence “was a two-edged sword or would have
    opened the door to damaging evidence,” 
    Ponticelli, 690 F.3d at 1296
    (quoting
    
    Cummings, 588 F.3d at 1367
    ).
    The decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Belmontes is
    instructive. Belmontes argued that his trial counsel had failed to present evidence
    that he had “suffered an extended bout with rheumatic fever, which led to
    emotional instability, impulsivity, and impairment of the neurophysiological
    mechanisms for planning and 
    reasoning.” 130 S. Ct. at 389
    (internal quotation
    22
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 23 of 72
    marks omitted). Reviewing the issue of prejudice de novo, the Supreme Court held
    that counsel’s failure to introduce this evidence caused no prejudice to Belmontes
    because any attempt to portray him in a positive light would have “invited the
    strongest possible evidence in rebuttal,” 
    id., specifically that
    Belmontes had been
    suspected of murder before, 
    id. at 385,
    and because “the cold, calculated nature of
    the [previous] murder and Belmontes’ subsequent bragging about it would have
    served as a powerful counterpoint” to any evidence that he had acted impulsively
    when he killed the victim, 
    id. at 389.
    Evans’s postconviction evidence of mitigation suffers from the same kind of
    shortcomings that the Supreme Court identified in Belmontes. The introduction of
    evidence of Evans’s brain injury and resulting impulse control problems would
    have “invited the strongest possible evidence in rebuttal” including evidence of his
    antisocial personality disorder and numerous violent outbursts. See 
    id. And evidence
    that Evans acted impulsively when he killed Johnson would have been
    countered by his own testimony that he was focused and in control when he killed
    Johnson, by testimony that Evans had announced his intent to kill Johnson in
    advance of doing so, and by testimony about Evans’s calculated actions to cover
    up his crime. In the light of the similarities between this appeal and Belmontes, we
    cannot conclude that the decision of the Supreme Court of Florida that Evans failed
    to establish prejudice was so objectively unreasonable that it was “beyond any
    23
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 24 of 72
    possibility for fairminded disagreement,” 
    Reese, 675 F.3d at 1286
    (quoting
    
    Richter, 131 S. Ct. at 787
    ), especially when we consider that the decision in
    Belmontes was on de novo review. See 
    Belmontes, 130 S. Ct. at 386
    –90.
    The reasonableness of the decision of the Supreme Court of Florida is
    further supported by the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in
    Pinholster. There the petitioner argued that the state court had unreasonably
    applied Strickland by determining that he was not prejudiced when evidence
    concerning his mental health and “serious substance abuse, mental illness, and
    criminal problems” among his family members had not been introduced at the
    penalty phase of his 
    trial. 131 S. Ct. at 1410
    . After concluding that the failure to
    present the mental health evidence was not prejudicial because introducing this
    evidence “would have opened the door to rebuttal by a state expert,” the Supreme
    Court held that the state court could have reasonably concluded that the failure to
    present the evidence concerning the petitioner’s family was not prejudicial because
    the evidence “was by no means clearly mitigating, as the jury might have
    concluded that Pinholster was simply beyond rehabilitation.” 
    Id. Evans’s postconviction
    evidence would have been even more likely to lead a
    jury to conclude that he “was simply beyond rehabilitation” than the evidence in
    Pinholster. See 
    id. Evans’s postconviction
    evidence established that he had
    “displayed a long history of behavioral problems and escalating violence.” Evans,
    24
    Case: 10-14920       Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 25 of 72
    
    946 So. 2d
    at 13. Evans’s behavioral problems and violence led his brother to
    describe him as “the angriest, most aggressive person [he had] ever met.” And
    Evans’s own experts testified that he “suffered from an uncontrollable rage
    reaction or impulse disorder as a result of the brain damage.” 
    Id. at 8.
    We cannot
    conclude that the decision of the Supreme Court of Florida that the postconviction
    evidence “would likely have been more harmful than helpful,” 
    id. at 13,
    was an
    objectively unreasonable application of federal law when the Supreme Court has
    concluded that less harmful evidence was “by no means clearly mitigating,”
    
    Pinholster, 131 S. Ct. at 1410
    .
    The Supreme Court has instructed that we are to determine the arguments
    supporting the decision of a state court and defer to that decision when “it is
    possible that fairminded jurists could disagree that those arguments or theories are
    inconsistent with the holding in a prior decision of [the Supreme Court.]” Richter,
    131 S.C.t at 786. Our precedents applying this standard hold that it is reasonable
    to treat the kind of evidence that Evans presented in his postconviction hearing as
    “a ‘two-edged sword.’” Suggs v. McNeil, 
    609 F.3d 1218
    , 1231 (11th Cir. 2010)
    (quoting Pace v. McNeil, 
    556 F.3d 1211
    , 1224 (11th Cir. 2009)). We have held,
    for example, that evidence of an “antisocial personality disorder [or] narcissistic
    personality disorder . . . [is] more harmful . . . than mitigating.” Reed v. Sec’y, Fla.
    Dep’t of Corr., 
    593 F.3d 1217
    , 1248 (11th Cir. 2010); see also 
    Suggs, 609 F.3d at 25
                  Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 26 of 72
    1231 (observing that psychopathy “is a trait most jurors tend to look disfavorably
    upon” (quoting Reed, 
    875 So. 2d
    at 437)); 
    Cummings, 588 F.3d at 1368
    (observing
    that “a diagnosis of antisocial personality disorder . . . is not mitigating but
    damaging”); Land v. Allen, 
    573 F.3d 1211
    , 1222 (11th Cir. 2009) (observing that
    petitioner’s “history of deception and criminality, which . . . [was] an integral part
    of [the expert’s] diagnosis [of antisocial personality disorder], substantially
    undercuts any potential benefit her mitigation testimony might have had”); Parker
    v. Sec’y for Dep’t of Corr., 
    331 F.3d 764
    , 788 (11th Cir. 2003) (observing that
    antisocial personality disorder is “a diagnosis the jury might not consider
    mitigating”). We have held too that evidence of substance abuse “can do as much
    or more harm than good in the eyes of the jury.” 
    Ponticelli, 690 F.3d at 1297
    (quoting Crawford v. Head, 
    311 F.3d 1288
    , 1321 (11th Cir. 2002)); see also, e.g.,
    
    Suggs, 609 F.3d at 1231
    (observing that evidence of historical drug and alcohol
    abuse “likely could have caused some jurors to vote in favor of death”); 
    Pace, 556 F.3d at 1224
    (observing that “evidence of a defendant’s [substance] addiction is
    often ‘a two-edged sword’: while providing a mitigating factor, such details may
    alienate the jury and offer little reason to lessen the sentence”). And we have held
    that “the indication of brain damage . . . can often hurt the defense as much or
    more than it can help.” Haliburton v. Sec’y for Dep’t of Corr., 
    342 F.3d 1233
    ,
    1244 (11th Cir. 2003). We have held too that evidence of behavioral problems
    26
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 27 of 72
    while attending school may be “potentially damaging” and “unfavorable.” See
    
    Suggs, 609 F.3d at 1231
    –32. In the light of these precedents, a fairminded jurist
    could conclude that the decision of the Supreme Court of Florida is consistent with
    the precedents of the Supreme Court of the United States.
    Evans argues that Porter compels the conclusion that the Supreme Court of
    Florida unreasonably applied Strickland because the court failed to consider or
    unreasonably discounted mitigation evidence presented in the postconviction
    proceeding, but we disagree. Porter held that it was unreasonable for a state court
    to conclude that counsel’s failure to present powerful mitigation evidence about his
    client, a decorated war veteran, was not 
    prejudicial. 130 S. Ct. at 453
    –54. The
    Court held that the state court unreasonably discounted the evidence of Porter’s
    military service by reducing the mitigating effect of heroic service to
    “inconsequential proportions” because of evidence that Porter had gone absent
    without official leave on more than one occasion, 
    id. at 455,
    when there was
    undisputed evidence that it was “not uncommon” for soldiers in Korea to go absent
    without official leave in Korea because they “became disoriented and separated
    from [their] unit,” 
    id. at 450,
    and that Porter went absent without official leave
    after returning to the United States to spend time with his son, 
    id. at 450
    n.3. The
    Court also ruled that it was unreasonable for the Supreme Court of Florida to
    “discount entirely” the impact that the testimony of Porter’s mental health expert
    27
    Case: 10-14920      Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 28 of 72
    might have had on the jury because the state court disagreed with the conclusions
    of Porter’s expert and the trial court had found the state expert more credible. 
    Id. at 455.
    Porter does not compel the conclusion that the Supreme Court of Florida
    failed to consider or unreasonably discounted Evans’s postconviction evidence.
    Nothing in the opinion of the Supreme Court of Florida suggests that the court did
    not give appropriate mitigating weight to Evans’s postconviction evidence.
    Instead, the decision of the Supreme Court of Florida establishes that the court
    considered the evidence and concluded that the mitigation evidence “would likely
    have been more harmful than helpful.” Evans, 
    946 So. 2d
    at 13.
    Evans’s argument that the Supreme Court of Florida failed to say enough
    and instead “assumed the evidence was more harmful than helpful,” would require
    us to decide that the Supreme Court of Florida should have provided a detailed
    explanation of the mitigating weight given to his postconviction evidence. This
    approach “smacks of a ‘grading papers’ approach that is outmoded in the post-
    AEDPA era.” Wright v. Sec’y for Dep’t of Corr., 
    278 F.3d 1245
    , 1255 (11th Cir.
    2002). Even when the mitigating weight given to the postconviction evidence is
    unclear, we must presume “that state courts know and follow the law.” Woodford
    v. Visciotti, 
    537 U.S. 19
    , 24, 
    123 S. Ct. 357
    , 360 (2002). Nothing in Porter allows
    us to “[r]equir[e] state courts to put forward rationales for their decisions so that
    28
    Case: 10-14920      Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 29 of 72
    federal courts can examine their thinking.” 
    Wright, 278 F.3d at 1255
    . Instead, we
    are required to defer to a state court decision even if the decision “is
    unaccompanied by an explanation.” 
    Richter, 131 S. Ct. at 784
    .
    Judge Martin’s dissent argues that the analysis of prejudice by the Supreme
    Court of Florida is inconsistent with Porter because the Supreme Court of Florida
    failed to give mitigating weight to the testimony of Evans’s mental health experts
    when it deferred to the credibility determination by the state trial court, but this
    argument misconstrues both Porter and the decision of the Supreme Court of
    Florida. The Supreme Court of the United States in Porter did not disapprove of
    the decision of the Supreme Court of Florida to defer to the credibility
    determination of the trial court for the purpose of determining that Porter had not
    established statutory mitigation; the Supreme Court instead reversed the decision
    of the Supreme Court of Florida to discount entirely, as nonstatutory mitigation,
    the undisputed expert testimony introduced by Porter about his mental health. As
    the Court explained, “mental health evidence that does not rise to the level of
    establishing a statutory mitigating circumstance may nonetheless be considered by
    the sentencing judge and jury as mitigating.” 
    Porter, 130 S. Ct. at 454
    . The Court
    concluded that it was “not reasonable to discount entirely the effect” that expert
    testimony introduced by Porter “regarding the existence of a brain abnormality and
    cognitive defects . . . might have had on the jury or the sentencing judge.” 
    Id. at 29
                 Case: 10-14920      Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 30 of 72
    455. The assertion of Judge Martin’s dissent that Porter disapproved deferring to a
    credibility determination by a state trial court is contrary to the face of the opinion
    of the Supreme Court of the United States itself. In Porter, “the State’s experts
    [had] identified perceived problems with the tests that [Porter’s expert had] used
    and the conclusions that he [had] dr[awn] from them,” 
    id. at 455,
    but none of the
    experts “testified that he could . . . rule out a brain abnormality,” 
    id. at 451.
    As a
    result, the testimony of Porter’s expert that Porter suffered from some brain
    abnormality was undisputed. Porter prohibits a state court from “discount[ing]
    entirely” the mitigating effect of undisputed testimony offered in mitigation, but
    Porter does not prohibit a state appellate court from deferring to a credibility
    determination made by a trial court. 
    Id. at 454–55.
    In contrast with Porter, the
    Supreme Court of Florida acknowledged that the postconviction evidence
    “established that Evans suffered from mental health problems,” Evans, 
    946 So. 2d
    at 13, and the court determined that the mitigating effect of this evidence was
    outweighed by the potential aggravating effect of other evidence introduced during
    the state postconviction hearing. See 
    id. Nothing in
    the opinion of the Supreme
    Court of Florida suggests that the mitigating effect of Evans’s mental health
    problems was “discount[ed] entirely.” See 
    Porter, 130 S. Ct. at 455
    .
    Evans also argues that the decision of the Supreme Court in Sears v. Upton,
    --- U.S. ---, 
    130 S. Ct. 3259
    (2010), establishes that the Supreme Court of Florida
    30
    Case: 10-14920      Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 31 of 72
    failed to understand how the Strickland standard applies in this appeal, but Sears
    offers Evans no support for at least three reasons. First, unlike the state court
    decision in this appeal, the decision in Sears was not subject to deferential review
    under section 2254(d) because the defendant had directly appealed the decision of
    the state court on state collateral review. 
    Id. at 3261
    n.1. Second, unlike this
    appeal, the state court had expressly refused to consider the test for prejudice under
    Strickland because it had concluded that the task was “impossible.” 
    Id. at 3264.
    Third, the Supreme Court in Sears did not hold that Sears’s life of crime would
    necessarily be considered mitigating when presented to a jury. Instead, the Court
    reasoned that “the fact that Sears’[s] brother . . . introduced Sears to a life of crime
    . . . would have been consistent with a mitigation theory portraying Sears as an
    individual with diminished judgment and reasoning skills.” 
    Id. at 3263.
    In contrast with Sears, the Supreme Court of Florida considered the
    mitigating effect of evidence presented during the postconviction hearing. The
    court considered whether there was a reasonable probability that Evans would have
    received a different sentence if Evans’s counsel had introduced this evidence
    during the penalty phase as Sears instructed. See 
    id. And the
    court concluded that
    there was not a reasonable probability that the sentence would have been different
    because the evidence “would likely have been more harmful than helpful.” Evans,
    
    946 So. 2d
    at 13. Sears did not foreclose the possibility that a state court could
    31
    Case: 10-14920    Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 32 of 72
    reasonably reach this conclusion, nor did Sears even address a situation in which a
    court is confronted with evidence that is as harmful as it is helpful. Evans’s
    argument that the decision of the Supreme Court of Florida is unreasonable in the
    light of Sears fails.
    Evans argues that it was unreasonable for the Supreme Court of Florida to
    conclude that the postconviction evidence was more harmful than helpful because
    the sentencing court already knew much of the potentially harmful information
    introduced in the postconviction hearing, but the record establishes otherwise. The
    sentencing court knew that Evans had a criminal history, but the sentencing court
    did not know that Evans took pride in his occupation as a “jack boy” who robbed
    drug dealers. 
    Id. at 7.
    The sentencing court knew that Evans had committed
    violent acts in the past, but the sentencing court did not know about Evans’s
    pattern of violence toward women. The sentencing court did not know that Evans
    had attacked a female student and a female teacher while in school; the sentencing
    court did not know that Evans had once searched for the mother of one of his
    children for three days before taking her home and “beating her up and all type of
    stuff;” and the sentencing court did not know that Evans had “punched his wife in
    the mouth for calling him another man’s name.” The sentencing court also did not
    know that Evans’s temperament was so violent and angry that his brother
    considered him “the angriest, most aggressive person [he had] ever met,” and that
    32
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 33 of 72
    one of his former teachers and counselors was only “surprised it [had]n’t
    happen[ed] sooner” when she heard that Evans had killed someone. And although
    the sentencing court knew that Evans had possessed firearms, the court did not
    know that Evans felt “ready” only when he had a gun, or that he had pulled a gun
    on his brother.
    Judge Martin’s dissent argues that the decision of the Supreme Court of
    Florida that Evans could not establish prejudice involved an unreasonable
    determination of the facts because the sentencing court was already “generally
    aware” of all “four types” of evidence that the Supreme Court of Florida identified
    as more harmful than helpful, Dissenting Op. of Martin, J., at 58, 61, but this
    argument fails for two reasons. First, to the extent that Judge Martin’s dissent
    argues that the Supreme Court of Florida made an unreasonable determination of
    the facts because not all of the evidence was “new,” her dissent relies on a straw
    man. Evans, 
    946 So. 2d
    at 12–13. The Supreme Court of Florida did not even
    suggest that all of the potentially aggravating evidence that would have been
    admitted if Evans had pursued a mental health mitigation theory would have been
    new to the sentencing court. The Supreme Court of Florida instead explained that
    “[p]resenting [mental health mitigation] evidence would have resulted in the jury
    hearing about Evans’[s] aggression towards students and teachers, his aggression
    towards police officers, his pride in being known as a ‘jack-boy’ because he robs
    33
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 34 of 72
    drug dealers, and his habit of carrying a gun.” 
    Id. at 13.
    Judge Martin’s dissent
    does not dispute that, in fact, the sentencing court would have heard this evidence,
    and the Supreme Court of Florida reasonably concluded that this evidence would
    have been more harmful than helpful. Second, the evidence presented at the state
    postconviction hearing, in any event, included new aggravating evidence
    concerning Evans’s background. The evidence provided new details about Evans’s
    violence toward women, his long pattern of violence toward authority figures, his
    violent criminal activity, and his belief that he was not “ready” unless he had a
    gun. Judge Martin’s dissent does not dispute that the sentencing court would have
    heard this new aggravating evidence. Judge Martin’s dissent instead argues that
    this new evidence is cumulative because the sentencing court “was already
    generally aware of” Evans’s background. Dissenting Op. of Martin, J., at 61. But
    Judge Martin’s dissent does not, and cannot, explain why “general[] aware[ness]”
    of Evans’s violent background renders unreasonable the decision of the Supreme
    Court of Florida that the evidence from Evans’s postconviction hearing, which
    included both harmful and helpful details about Evans’s background, was more
    harmful than helpful.
    The Supreme Court of Florida reasonably concluded that Evans’s new
    mental health theory of mitigation was fraught with peril. In response to the
    evidence about brain damage, the state could have elicited testimony from Dr.
    34
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 35 of 72
    Carpenter and Dr. McClaren—an expert from each side—that they had “no doubt”
    that Evans had antisocial personality disorder and from Dr. Dee that Evans
    probably had antisocial personality disorder. As we have held consistently, “[t]his
    evidence is potentially aggravating as it suggests that [Evans] has antisocial
    personality disorder, which is a trait most jurors tend to look disfavorably upon,
    that is not mitigating but damaging.” 
    Suggs, 609 F.3d at 1231
    (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted). The state could have elicited testimony from all three
    mental health experts that Evans had historically consumed alcohol and was often
    violent when he did so. In particular, the state could have elicited testimony from
    Evans’s own expert that “Evans [wa]s diagnosed as a bad dude who commits
    criminal acts when he’s drunk.” “This evidence, alone and in combination with the
    evidence that [Evans] drank . . . before he murdered [Johnson], likely could have
    caused some jurors to vote in favor of death.” 
    Id. Although Evans’s
    brain damage
    is relevant to the extent that it suggests that he has problems controlling his
    impulses and is less morally culpable for his actions, Evans’s own testimony
    proves that he was in control when he murdered Johnson. Evans admitted that,
    although he had been drinking, he had a “clear recollection of what happened” and
    he “knew what was going on.” The evidence also established that, before he
    committed the murder, Evans had attempted to avoid law enforcement. Evans
    conceded that he was “perfectly aware of everything” and was “functioning fine.”
    35
    Case: 10-14920    Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 36 of 72
    The Supreme Court of Florida reasonably concluded that Evans’s new
    mental health theory of mitigation “would have opened the door to damaging
    evidence.” 
    Cummings, 588 F.3d at 1367
    (internal quotation marks omitted). If
    evidence of Evans’s behavioral problems both in school and after had been
    introduced, a sentencing court would have heard about Evans’s long history of
    violence toward authority figures like the police and teachers. If evidence of
    Evans’s lack of impulse control had been introduced, a sentencing court would
    have heard of Evans’s violence toward women. If evidence of Evans’s difficulty
    controlling aggression had been introduced, a sentencing court would have heard
    damaging testimony by Evans’s own brother that Evans “had a very bad temper
    problem” and was “the angriest, most aggressive person [he had] ever met.” If
    evidence of Evans’s escalating pattern of aggression while in school had been
    introduced, a sentencing court would have heard the chilling observation of
    Evans’s former school counselor that she “felt with all [her] heart that [Evans] was
    capable of very great violence,” and that she believed that Evans was even more
    dangerous than the other children in the emotionally disturbed program. If
    evidence of Evans’s difficulty complying with the law had been introduced, a
    sentencing court would have heard about Evans’s affinity for guns, his penchant
    for robbing drug dealers, and his use of crack cocaine. If evidence that Evans’s
    behavioral problems had been caused by his childhood had been introduced, a
    36
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 37 of 72
    sentencing court would have also heard Evans’s own denial that his childhood had
    anything at all to do with his life of crime. In the light of the wealth of new
    potentially harmful evidence introduced at the postconviction hearing, “[i]t is
    reasonable to doubt that, taken as a whole, [the new] evidence would have
    impressed a [sentencing court].” 
    Suggs, 609 F.3d at 1230
    .
    IV. CONCLUSION
    The denial of Evans’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is AFFIRMED.
    37
    Case: 10-14920    Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 38 of 72
    JORDAN, Circuit Judge, concurring.
    I concur in Judge Pryor’s opinion for the Court. I write to address an
    assertion by the Secretary which I believe to be mistaken and which, if accepted,
    will cause unnecessary analytical problems in the future.
    I
    The Secretary insists that, when evaluating an ineffective assistance of
    counsel claim under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), we must apply a doubly deferential
    standard of review to the performance and prejudice prongs under Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    (1984). See Appellee’s Initial Br. at 12; Appellee’s En
    Banc Br. at 13. As explained below, however, double deference does not apply to
    the prejudice inquiry.
    Where the performance prong of Strickland is concerned, habeas review is
    indeed doubly deferential. See, e.g., Yarborough v. Gentry, 
    540 U.S. 1
    , 6 (2003)
    (“Judicial review of a defense attorney’s summation is . . . highly deferential—and
    doubly deferential when it is conducted through the lens of federal habeas.”). This
    is because, as the Supreme Court told us in Strickland, counsel’s performance is
    itself due a base level of deference: “Judicial scrutiny of counsel’s performance
    must be highly 
    deferential.” 466 U.S. at 689
    . When we layer the “deferential lens
    of § 2254(d)” atop that first level of deference, the end result is “doubly
    38
    Case: 10-14920      Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 39 of 72
    deferential” review of counsel’s performance. See Knowles v. Mirzayance, 
    556 U.S. 111
    , 121 n.2, 123 (2009).
    This case, however, involves only the prejudice prong of Strickland, and
    with respect to that prong there is no underlying deference. Unlike the performance
    evaluation, which asks us to assess what counsel did or did not do, see 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688
    (explaining that the measure of attorney performance under the
    Sixth Amendment is “reasonableness under prevailing professional norms”), the
    prejudice question is, in the end, a legal one. There is no “what” to analyze. There
    is only the ex post legal determination, by a court based on a hypothetical construct
    with counsel’s errors corrected, as to whether the defendant was or was not
    prejudiced by his counsel’s actions or omissions. See, e.g., Wiggins v. Smith, 
    539 U.S. 510
    , 534 (2003) (to determine whether prejudice resulted from counsel’s
    deficient performance at a capital sentencing hearing, a court must “reweigh the
    evidence in aggravation against the totality of available mitigating evidence”);
    Lockhart v. Fretwell, 
    506 U.S. 364
    , 372 (1993) (the prejudice inquiry “focuses on
    the question whether counsel’s deficient performance renders the result of the trial
    unreliable or the proceeding fundamentally unfair”). It therefore makes no sense to
    say that initial judicial review as to whether prejudice resulted from counsel’s
    deficient performance—on its own, before adding AEDPA deference—involves
    any deference. We give deference on habeas to a state court’s ruling on prejudice
    39
    Case: 10-14920    Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 40 of 72
    under § 2254(d), but that is the only deference involved. See Ruiz v. Sec’y, Fla.
    Dep’t of Corr., 439 F. App’x 831, 835 (11th Cir. 2011) (“Analyzing a claim of
    ineffective assistance under § 2254(d) adds a ‘double layer’ of deference to
    counsel’s performance.”) (emphasis added); Bowling v. Haeberlin, ___ F. Supp. 2d
    ___, 
    2012 WL 4498647
    , at *6 (E.D. Ky. Sept. 28, 2012) (prejudice review “is not
    doubly deferential like the performance inquiry”).
    II
    There is language in some Supreme Court and Eleventh Circuit opinions
    suggesting that doubly deferential review applies to the prejudice prong. See
    Cullen v. Pinholster, 
    131 S. Ct. 1388
    , 1403 (2011) (“Our review of the California
    Supreme Court’s decision [as to performance and prejudice] is . . . doubly
    deferential.”); Frazier v. Bouchard, 
    661 F.3d 519
    , 534 (11th Cir. 2011) (“Bearing
    in mind the ‘doubly’ deferential nature of Strickland review under AEDPA, we
    cannot hold that Frazier has made the requisite showing of prejudice.”) (citation
    omitted); Pooler v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., ___ F.3d ___, 
    2012 WL 6555012
    , at
    *17 (11th Cir. Dec. 17, 2012) (“Because we must view Pooler’s ineffective
    assistance of counsel claim—which is governed by the deferential Strickland
    test—through the lens of AEDPA deference, the resulting standard of review is
    ‘doubly deferential.’”). But there is a strong argument that such language is dicta,
    40
    Case: 10-14920    Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 41 of 72
    for neither the Supreme Court nor this Circuit has actually applied double
    deference to the question of prejudice.
    Cullen, Frazier, and Pooler used straight-forward single-deference AEDPA
    review as to the state court’s ruling on prejudice, without ever explaining how
    doubly deferential review would actually work with respect to prejudice. See
    
    Cullen, 131 S. Ct. at 1410
    (“Given what little additional mitigating evidence
    Pinholster presented in state habeas, we cannot say that the California Supreme
    Court’s determination [of no prejudice] was unreasonable.”); 
    Frazier, 661 F.3d at 533
    (“Given the availability of an additional, highly prejudicial aggravating
    circumstance, we simply cannot say that, but for the failure of Frazier’s counsel to
    investigate and present additional mitigating evidence to the sentencing jury, ‘there
    is a reasonable probability that . . . the result of the proceeding would have been
    different.’”) (quoting 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694
    ); Pooler, 
    2012 WL 6555012
    , at
    *22 (“[W]e conclude that the Florida Supreme Court’s decision that Pooler did not
    satisfy Strickland’s prejudice prong was not contrary to Supreme Court precedent,
    did not unreasonably apply Supreme Court precedent, and was not based on an
    unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the state-court evidence.”).
    Because the mere articulation (and repetition) of a legal standard, without actual
    application of that standard, can amount to dicta, see Bd. of Trustees of State Univ.
    of New York v. Fox, 
    492 U.S. 469
    , 476-77 (1989), the opinions in Cullen, Frazier,
    41
    Case: 10-14920    Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 42 of 72
    and Pooler may not constitute binding precedent mandating doubly deferential
    prejudice review. See Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Florida, 
    514 U.S. 44
    , 67
    (1996) (“When an opinion issues for the Court, it is not only the result but also
    those portions of the opinion necessary to that result by which we are bound.”);
    United States v. Kaley, 
    579 F.3d 1246
    , 1253 n.10 (11th Cir. 2009) (“[D]icta is
    defined as those portions of of an opinion that are not necessary to deciding the
    case[.]”) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted); P. Leval, Judging Under
    the Constitution: Dicta About Dicta, 81 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 1249, 1256 (2006) (“A
    dictum is an assertion in a court’s opinion of a proposition of law which does not
    explain why the court’s judgment goes in favor of the winner. If the court’s
    judgment and the reasoning which supports it would remain unchanged, regardless
    of the proposition in question, that proposition plays no role in explaining why the
    judgment goes for the winner.”).
    If the “doubly deferential” articulations in Cullen, Frazier, and Pooler do
    constitute holdings as to the prejudice prong, then the standard apparently exists in
    name only. As explained above, in practice doubly deferential prejudice review is
    identical to (and no more demanding than) single-deference AEDPA prejudice
    review. A couple of examples help illustrate the point. Imagine that a court says
    in an opinion that the applicable standard of review is “heightened abuse of
    discretion,” but then conducts run-of-the-mill (and non-heightened) abuse of
    42
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 43 of 72
    discretion review, or says that the applicable standard of review is “super clearly
    erroneous review,” but then conducts traditional (and no more demanding) clear
    error review. In both of these scenarios, as here, a later court would be justified in
    concluding that the articulation of the new standard of review constituted dicta, or
    that the new standard, in practice, was no different from the previously accepted
    (and more familiar) standard.
    I acknowledge that some courts and judges have required or called for
    doubly deferential prejudice review explicitly. See, e.g., Foust v. Houk, 
    655 F.3d 524
    , 534 (6th Cir. 2011) (“We therefore afford double deference to . . . both prongs
    of the Strickland test.”); Elmore v. Ozmint, 
    661 F.3d 783
    , 876 (4th Cir. 2011)
    (Wilkinson, J., dissenting) (“[C]ourts regularly apply the ‘doubly deferential’
    standard of Strickland and AEDPA to both the performance and prejudice prongs.
    This makes good sense.”) (citations omitted). Yet those who have done so have
    likewise failed to explain why it is legally appropriate or where the initial level of
    deference comes from. Nor have they told us how to go about giving it. Instead,
    despite purporting to apply double deference, they too have carried out the
    prejudice inquiry in the traditional, single-deference, AEDPA manner for capital
    sentencing proceedings: by evaluating whether the state court, after weighing the
    totality of mitigation and aggravation evidence to determine if there is a reasonable
    probability of a different result, reached a conclusion that is reasonable in light of
    43
    Case: 10-14920   Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 44 of 72
    clearly established Supreme Court precedent. See, e.g., 
    Foust, 655 F.3d at 538-39
    ;
    
    Elmore, 661 F.3d at 876
    (Wilkinson, J., dissenting). These deficiencies indicate
    that the phrase “doubly deferential,” while easy on the ear, is difficult on the pen
    when it comes to prejudice.
    One might ask why any of this matters. After all, if a state court’s ruling on
    prejudice is going to be upheld as reasonable under AEDPA single deference, what
    difference does it make to say that a federal court is applying “doubly deferential”
    review? The danger is not in the great majority of cases, where state court rulings
    on prejudice are going to viewed as reasonable, but rather in those where a federal
    court, after applying AEDPA deference, nevertheless concludes that a state court
    ruling on prejudice is unreasonable within the meaning of § 2254(d). In such
    cases, the erroneous notion that there is another level of deference out there
    somewhere may tip the scales and work to deny relief to deserving habeas
    petitioners.
    Unwarranted consequences can result when a “phrase takes on a life of its
    own, and before too long, . . . starts being applied to situations . . . removed from
    its intended and proper context.” Tice v. Am. Airlines, Inc., 
    162 F.3d 966
    , 970 (7th
    Cir. 1999). As Justice Cardozo, in a paraphrase of Justice Holmes, cautioned: “The
    repetition of a catchword can hold analysis in fetters for fifty years and more.”
    44
    Case: 10-14920    Date Filed: 01/04/2013     Page: 45 of 72
    Benjamin N. Cardozo, Mr. Justice Holmes, 44 HARV. L. REV. 682, 689 (1931).
    These concerns, in my view, apply with full force here.
    III
    Standards of review are critical to the business of judging, and can often be
    outcome-determinative. My hope, in writing separately, is to suggest that we
    should not blindly assume that the concept of doubly deferential review applies to
    the question of prejudice in habeas cases. If we subject the assumption to rigorous
    examination now, we will see that it is mistaken, and can then unfetter the analysis
    of Strickland prejudice for the many habeas litigants and courts to come.
    45
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 46 of 72
    WILSON, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    The original panel, of which I was a part, held that Evans met AEDPA’s
    standard for habeas relief under Strickland because his trial counsel presented
    absolutely no mental health mitigating evidence at sentencing and wholly failed to
    conduct a meaningful investigation into Evan’s background. As a result, Evans
    was sentenced to death without the jury and the sentencing judge having all of the
    facts essential to the deliberative process. 
    Evans, 681 F.3d at 1254
    –70 . I disagree
    with the majority’s conclusion to the contrary. I write separately, however, to
    express my reservation about the decision by the Court to take this case en banc in
    the first place. A majority of the active judges in regular service on the Court
    voted to reconsider this appeal en banc. As a result, we are faced with a majority
    opinion that essentially amounts to a mere disagreement with the original panel
    opinion. En banc review was not “necessary to secure or maintain uniformity of
    the court’s decisions,” nor does this appeal concern “a question of exceptional
    importance.” Fed. R. App. P. 35(a). The Rule says that if neither of these
    conditions are met, en banc review is “not favored and ordinarily will not be
    ordered.” 
    Id. Our rules
    of appellate procedure urge restraint in invoking the en banc
    mechanism, providing that rehearing en banc should be granted only when
    necessary “to secure or maintain uniformity of [our] decisions” or when “the
    46
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013     Page: 47 of 72
    proceeding involves a question of exceptional importance.” Fed. R. App. P. 35(a);
    see Boxer X v. Harris, 
    459 F.3d 1114
    , 1115 (11th Cir. 2006) (en banc) (Carnes, J.,
    concurring in the denial of rehearing en banc); see also Fed. R. App. P. 35(b)
    advisory committee’s note (explaining not once, but twice, that Rule 35(a) is
    intended to embody “rigid standards”). En banc resolution of the case before us is
    not necessary to secure uniformity of our decisions. Though the majority might
    suggest otherwise, its only quarrel is with the application of agreed-upon
    precedents to the facts at hand. So too with Judge Edmonson’s dissent to the
    original panel opinion. See 
    Evans, 681 F.3d at 1272
    (Edmonson, J., dissenting)
    (noting that the majority, applying Strickland and its progeny, simply “reached a
    different conclusion” than he would have reached on the facts). Yet in such a case,
    Eleventh Circuit Rule 35-3, our companion to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure
    35, explicitly provides: “Alleged errors in a panel’s determination of state law, or
    in the facts of the case . . . , or error asserted in the panel’s misapplication of
    correct precedent to the facts of the case, are matters for rehearing before the panel
    but not for en banc consideration.” 11th Cir. R. 35-3 (emphasis supplied).
    Nor does this appeal involve “a question of exceptional importance.” Fed.
    R. App. P. 35(a)(2); see United States v. Blaylock, 
    275 F.3d 1030
    (11th Cir. 2001)
    (en banc) (Carnes, J., concurring) (“En banc rehearing is ‘an extraordinary
    procedure’ intended for correction of ‘precedent-setting error[s] of exceptional
    47
    Case: 10-14920      Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 48 of 72
    importance.’” (quoting 11th Cir. R. 35-3)). There is nothing about Evans’s
    ineffective assistance of counsel claim that takes it out of the ordinary, run-of-the-
    mill such claims that we see, regrettably, so often in this circuit. I believe that
    every death case is important, but that does not mean that every issue presented in
    a death case is necessarily one of exceptional importance.
    This appeal presents no novel question of law. The panel opinion disturbs
    no settled rule of law nor impugns the continued validity of any previous Eleventh
    Circuit or Supreme Court decision. See Watson v. Geren, 
    587 F.3d 156
    , 158 (2d
    Cir. 2009) (per curiam) (Pooler, Katzmann, B.D. Parker, Wesley, and Hall, J.J.,
    concurring in the denial of rehearing en banc) (“Given that the panel’s decision
    does not seek to depart from existing standards, the issue presented by this appeal
    is not properly considered a ‘question of exceptional importance’ within the
    meaning of Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 35(a)(2).”). In cases such as
    these, we must be mindful that “the collective wisdom of the federal judiciary is
    that en banc review must be soundly justified, else the game will not be worth the
    candle.” Church of Scientology of Cal. v. Foley, 
    640 F.2d 1335
    , 1342 (D.C. Cir.
    1981) (Robinson, J., dissenting, joined by Edwards and Ginsburg, J.J.). No such
    sound justification is present here. Further,
    [c]ontrary to the view one must perforce infer from the court’s
    decision today, the en banc court is not an institution for monitoring
    panel decisionmaking; it flies in the face of both the intent of
    48
    Case: 10-14920   Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 49 of 72
    Congress and Supreme Court precedent to use the Rule 35 procedure
    merely to correct individual injustices or mistakes.
    
    Id. at 1241
    (Robinson, J., dissenting, joined by Edwards and Ginsburg, J.J.)
    (internal quotation marks omitted); see E.E.O.C. v. Ind. Bell Tel. Co., 
    256 F.3d 516
    , 529 (7th Cir. 2001) (en banc) (Posner, J., concurring) (noting that “we do not
    take cases en banc merely because of disagreement with a panel’s decision, or
    rather a piece of a decision”); see also Hart v. Massanari, 
    266 F.3d 1155
    , 1172
    n.29 (9th Cir. 2001) (Kozinski, C.J.) (“Because they are so cumbersome, en banc
    procedures are seldom used merely to correct the errors of individual
    panels . . . .”).
    Disagreement with the panel opinion in a given case is simply insufficient to
    merit en banc review. If mere disagreement among federal judges on a particular
    issue were the touchstone of en banc review, nary a single opinion would see the
    light of day. Cf. 
    Foley, 640 F.2d at 1341
    (Robinson, J., dissenting, joined by
    Edwards and Ginsburg, J.J.) (“[T]he courts agree that the availability of en banc
    rehearings to cure intra-circuit conflicts does not justify a vote for reconsideration
    by the entire court merely because (a judge) disagrees with the result reached by
    the panel.” (internal quotation marks omitted)). Our appellate rules were
    judiciously crafted with exactly that consideration in mind.
    49
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 50 of 72
    MARTIN, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    I respectfully dissent. The majority opinion goes to great lengths to
    demonstrate that Wydell Evans is a dangerous person who committed a horrific
    crime. I have no quarrel with this description. I am writing in dissent, however,
    because federal habeas principles apply to even those among us who deserve the
    harshest punishment. To my mind, it is in those cases that the principles
    underlying the Great Writ matter most. Applying those principles, and giving the
    deference to the Florida Supreme Court that it is certainly due, I have concluded
    that Mr. Evans is entitled to federal habeas relief. Our Supreme Court has
    interpreted the U.S. Constitution to guarantee a prisoner facing a death sentence a
    real investigation into his own life, so that a jury can know any facts that might
    weigh against putting him to death. Mr. Evans’s jury never knew the result of any
    such investigation, because it had not been done at the time they heard the case.
    Now that an investigation has been done, the facts it turned up could have
    reasonably inclined the jury to sentence Mr. Evans to something other than death.
    The majority has affirmed the District Court’s denial of habeas relief to Mr.
    Evans, reciting the fact that the Florida Supreme Court’s decision is entitled to
    deference under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA). See
    28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). It is certainly true that AEDPA imposes a standard that is
    “difficult to meet” for a state prisoner seeking the writ of habeas corpus based on
    50
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 51 of 72
    ineffective assistance of counsel, where that claim was denied on the merits by the
    state court. See Harrington v. Richter, __U.S.__, __,
    131 S. Ct. 770
    , 786 (2011).
    The majority opinion turns on the reasonableness of the Florida Supreme Court’s
    conclusion that “Evans had failed to prove prejudice because his postconviction
    evidence of mitigation was more harmful than helpful.” Maj. Op. at 3; see also
    Evans v. State, 
    946 So. 2d 1
    , 13 (Fla. 2006). I have concluded to the contrary that
    the Florida Supreme Court’s findings in this regard constituted an unreasonable
    determination of the facts in light of the evidence that came to light after Mr.
    Evans was sentenced to death.
    The majority emphasizes the bad things brought out about Mr. Evans during
    the state court evidentiary hearing that likely would have been told to the jury if he
    had presented a mental health defense. Again, I do not question that presentation
    of a mental health defense likely would have resulted in the jury hearing bad things
    about Mr. Evans, including some evidence his jury never heard. And I certainly
    recognize that the facts and circumstances the jury heard about Mr. Evans’s
    shooting of Angel Johnson, together with his despicable conduct after he shot her,
    were not mitigating. But I do part ways with my colleagues as to whether the
    Florida Supreme Court’s prejudice analysis under Strickland was reasonable and
    entitled to deference under AEDPA.
    51
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 52 of 72
    As I have said, I find the Florida Supreme Court’s decision rejecting Mr.
    Evans’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel during the penalty phase of his
    trial to be based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the
    evidence presented in the state court proceeding. Separately, I have also concluded
    that the Florida Supreme Court’s decision involved an unreasonable application of
    the prejudice analysis required by Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    (1984). Once the state court unreasonably applies Strickland, or
    unreasonably determines the facts, its analysis is not entitled to deference under 28
    U.S.C. § 2254(d). I have therefore conducted a de novo review, and concluded
    that Mr. Evans has demonstrated “there is a reasonable probability that, absent
    [counsel’s deficient performance], the sentencer . . . would have concluded that the
    balance of aggravating and mitigating circumstances did not warrant death.”
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 
    695, 104 S. Ct. at 2069
    .
    I.
    Like the Florida Supreme Court, the majority for this Court does not decide
    whether the acts and omissions of Mr. Evans’s lawyer constituted deficient
    performance under Strickland. Instead, this Court’s majority has affirmed the
    denial of habeas relief based on its conclusion that the Florida Supreme Court’s
    analysis that Mr. Evans was not prejudiced by his lawyer’s failure to tell the jury
    about late discovered “mitigating” evidence is entitled to deference. This approach
    52
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 53 of 72
    of addressing only one of the two inquiries required by Strickland for a finding that
    counsel was ineffective is, of course, well established habeas practice and helps
    conserve judicial resources. See 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 697
    , 104 S. Ct. at 2069.
    Strickland’s deficiency and prejudice components involve very separate and
    distinct inquiries. Insofar as they did not address it, I do not understand the
    majority opinion to have decided the Strickland deficiency component one way or
    the other. However, I think some description of counsel’s deficient performance is
    necessary to fully address the question of whether Mr. Evans was prejudiced by
    that performance.
    For context, I begin with the undisputed proposition that our system does not
    allow a person to face a sentence of death without someone having looked into his
    background. “It is unquestioned that under the prevailing professional norms at the
    time of [Evans’s 1999] trial, counsel had ‘an obligation to conduct a thorough
    investigation of the defendant’s background.’” Porter v. McCollum, 
    558 U.S. 30
    ,
    ___, 
    130 S. Ct. 447
    , 452–53 (2009) (quoting Williams v. Taylor, 
    529 U.S. 362
    ,
    396, 
    120 S. Ct. 1495
    , 1515 (2000) (citing 1 ABA Standards for Criminal Justice
    4-4.1, commentary, p. 4–55 (2d ed. 1980))). The Supreme Court has further
    instructed that under Strickland, “our principal concern . . . is not whether counsel
    should have presented” mitigating evidence, but rather “whether the investigation
    supporting counsel’s decision not to introduce mitigating evidence of [the
    53
    Case: 10-14920       Date Filed: 01/04/2013      Page: 54 of 72
    defendant’s] background was itself reasonable.” Wiggins v. Smith, 
    539 U.S. 510
    ,
    522–23, 
    123 S. Ct. 2527
    , 2536 (2003) (emphasis omitted).
    For Mr. Evans, his trial counsel did little mitigation investigation. Perhaps
    worse, he formulated his “strategy” to put on a penalty phase defense that Mr.
    Evans had good character even before what little bit of investigation he did do.
    Indeed, we now know from the state evidentiary hearing, held after Mr. Evans was
    sentenced to death, that his trial counsel understood at the time he represented Mr.
    Evans, that “non-statutory mitigation was” limited to good character evidence.
    In preparing for his mitigation case, counsel asked few questions of Mr.
    Evans’s family, relying mainly on a brief, thirty-minute interview of Evans’s
    mother, Lilly. Even from the beginning, counsel instructed her to say only good
    things about her son and his background.1 He did ask Lilly to collect character
    witnesses for her son’s trial, but she understood that counsel wanted only “people
    that could say some good things about” Mr. Evans. Counsel then sent form letters,
    rather than individualized inquiries, to solicit character witnesses. 2 He did not
    1
    The American Bar Association (ABA) guideline that existed at the time advised counsel to
    “explore the existence of other potential sources of information relating to the offense, the
    client’s mental state, and the presence or absence of any aggravating factors under the applicable
    death penalty statute and any mitigating factors.” 
    Id. § 11.4.1(D)(2)(B).
    2
    The form letter was as follows:
    Dear [X]:
    Your name and address was provided to me by Lilly Evans, as a possible
    character witness for her son, Wydell Jody Evans, with regard to charges of First
    Degree Murder.
    Would you please indicate, in your own words, the following:
    54
    Case: 10-14920        Date Filed: 01/04/2013       Page: 55 of 72
    collect basic background materials that would have been easy to get, such as Mr.
    Evans’s school and medical records.3 This was all in the face of ABA Guideline
    § 11.4.1 from 1989—reflecting prevailing professional norms ten years before Mr.
    Evans’s trial—which provides that counsel’s “investigation should comprise
    efforts to discover all reasonably available mitigating evidence and evidence to
    rebut any aggravating evidence that may be introduced by the prosecutor.” ABA
    Guideline § 11.4.1(C).
    Because counsel conducted no mitigation investigation beyond Mr. Evans’s
    good character, he never learned that Mr. Evans was hit by a car at age three,
    suffering a closed head injury with resulting brain damage, learning disabilities,
    emotional handicaps, and impulse control problems, all of which were significant
    enough by the time Mr. Evans was seven years old, to warrant a psychological
    assessment by public school authorities.
    1.      How long you have known Wydell Jody Evans;
    2.      How to [sic] you know Wydell Jody Evans – as a
    a.     friend;
    b.     family member;
    c.     co-worker;
    d.     employee;
    f.     employer.
    3.      In one or two sentences please indicate what you think of Wydell Jody
    Evans as a person and whether or not you feel he committed the crime for
    which he has been charged.
    3
    No competent counsel in 1999 would have failed to collect and review this type of information
    especially where, as here, the defendant was a lifelong resident of the county where the trial was
    held. See ABA Guidelines for the Appointment and Performance of Counsel in Death Penalty
    Cases (1989), cited in 
    Wiggins, 539 U.S. at 524
    , 123 S. Ct. at 2536–37.
    55
    Case: 10-14920      Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 56 of 72
    Counsel also unreasonably failed to follow up on the limited background
    information he did have. For example, the Florida Supreme Court noted that trial
    counsel “testified that the presentence investigation reports (PSI) from Evans’[s]
    prior convictions indicated that his mental health was perfect and that he had only
    seen a mental health expert when he was young.” Evans, 
    946 So. 2d
    at 9
    (emphasis added). While the state courts emphasized that Mr. Evans had reported
    “perfect” mental health in his PSI reports, it is also true that the PSIs reported that
    he had “seen a mental health expert when he was young.” 
    Id. This information
    should have been a red flag to trial counsel, alerting him to the need to conduct a
    follow-up investigation. See 
    Rompilla, 545 U.S. at 392
    , 125 S. Ct. at 2468–69.
    No competent counsel in 1999 would have failed to follow-up on information of
    this kind. Prompted by this red flag, competent counsel would have then obtained
    and reviewed school and medical records, for example. Then armed with these
    records, competent counsel would have investigated Mr. Evans’s mental health and
    consequently discovered his history of brain damage.
    In sum, Mr. Evans’s trial counsel’s performance was deficient because he
    stopped his investigation too early, before he completed the kind of thorough
    investigation contemplated by Wiggins and then-prevailing professional norms.
    See Sears v. Upton, __U.S. __, __, 
    130 S. Ct. 3259
    , 3264 (2010) (agreeing with
    state court’s determination that the “the cursory nature of counsel’s investigation
    56
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 57 of 72
    into mitigation evidence—‘limited to one day or less, talking to witnesses selected
    by [defendant’s] mother’—was ‘on its face . . . constitutionally inadequate’”
    (citation omitted)). Counsel’s decision to focus his investigation on Mr. Evans’s
    good character was not an informed decision based upon a constitutionally
    adequate investigation. As in Wiggins, and in breach of well-defined norms in
    existence at the time of Mr. Evans’s 1999 penalty phase, Mr. Evans’s trial counsel
    “abandoned [his] investigation of [Evans’s] background after having acquired only
    rudimentary knowledge of his history from a narrow set of sources.” 
    Wiggins, 539 U.S. at 524
    , 123 S. Ct. at 2537. Although counsel’s decision to focus on good
    character evidence might be “reasonable, in the abstract, [it] does not obviate the
    need to analyze whether counsel’s failure to conduct an adequate mitigation
    investigation before arriving at this particular theory prejudiced” the defendant.
    
    Sears, 130 S. Ct. at 3265
    . “Whether or not [trial counsel’s] omissions were
    sufficiently prejudicial to have affected the outcome of sentencing, they clearly
    demonstrate that trial counsel did not fulfill [his] obligation to conduct a thorough
    investigation of the defendant’s background.” 
    Williams, 529 U.S. at 396
    , 120 S.
    Ct. at 1514–15.
    II.
    I will now set out how I came to conclude that the Florida Supreme Court’s
    ruling on the prejudice prong of Mr. Evans’s penalty phase ineffective assistance
    57
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 58 of 72
    of counsel claim involved an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the
    evidence presented in the state court proceeding. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2). The
    error is plain from the Florida Supreme Court’s decision, where it stated:
    Evans has failed to establish prejudice because the mitigation
    evidence he presented at the evidentiary hearing would likely have
    been more harmful than helpful. An ineffective assistance claim does
    not arise from the failure to present mitigation evidence where that
    evidence presents a double-edged sword. While the testimony
    presented at the evidentiary hearing established that Evans suffered
    from mental health problems, it also displayed a long history of
    behavioral problems and escalating violence throughout his school
    career. Presenting this evidence at the penalty phase would have
    resulted in the jury hearing about Evans’[s] aggression towards
    students and teachers, his aggression towards police officers, his pride
    in being known as a “jack-boy” because he robs drug dealers, and his
    habit of carrying a gun. It is just as likely that this evidence would
    have      been      more       “aggravating”       than      mitigating.
    Evans, 
    946 So. 2d
    at 13 (some quotation marks omitted). This decision specifies
    four types of evidence that the jury would have heard if Mr. Evans had presented a
    mental health defense: (1) “aggression towards police officers;” (2) “pride in being
    known as a ‘jack-boy’” and robbing drug dealers; (3) habit of carrying a gun; and
    (4) “aggression towards students and teachers.” This is an unreasonable
    determination of the facts, because Mr. Evans’s jury already heard much of this
    evidence—some of it from Mr. Evans’s own mouth, when he testified at both the
    guilt and sentencing phases of his trial.
    For example, the jury was already well aware of Mr. Evans’s “aggression
    towards police officers.” Certified copies of his two prior convictions for battery
    58
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013     Page: 59 of 72
    on law enforcement officers were introduced into evidence during the penalty
    phase of his trial. This was augmented by portions of the presentence investigation
    reports from these prior convictions, describing the battery convictions, which
    were also admitted into evidence during the penalty phase. Finally, Mr. Evans
    himself described from the witness stand his batteries against law enforcement
    officers, telling the jury that he kicked a police officer in his private parts in one
    incident, and struck an officer in the throat in another.
    The penalty phase jury also knew that Mr. Evans was known to carry a gun.
    A certified copy of his prior felony conviction for possession a firearm was
    admitted into evidence during his penalty phase. Also, Mr. Evans testified before
    the same jury during his guilt phase, that he knew how to operate firearms.
    Notably, the same jury had already convicted him of first-degree murder for
    shooting Angel Johnson.
    While the jury did not hear in precisely the same terms about Mr. Evans’s
    violence in school; that he robbed drug dealers; or that he prided himself on being
    known as “jack-boy,” the jury was well aware of his violent tendencies. The jury
    knew that Mr. Evans had six felony convictions, including the violent felonies for
    battery on a law enforcement officer discussed above, as well as aggravated
    battery. Mr. Evans testified to the jury that he had difficulties in his later school
    years, including skipping school and being suspended. Indeed, Mr. Evans told the
    59
    Case: 10-14920       Date Filed: 01/04/2013       Page: 60 of 72
    jury that he dropped out of school in tenth grade because he was involved in crime.
    He described his activities as “thuddin’.” He also told them that he was already in
    prison by the time he should have graduated high school.
    To the extent the postconviction aggravating evidence is just more of the
    aggravating evidence the jury already knew about Mr. Evans’s background, it is
    not reasonable to find Mr. Evans’s new mental health mitigation “more harmful
    than helpful.” The Florida Supreme Court’s determination that the postconviction
    mitigation evidence presented a “double-edged sword” is objectively unreasonable
    because it fails to recognize the fact that the jury was already well-acquainted with
    the aggravating edge of the sword, when the same was not true of the mitigating
    edge. The point of Strickland’s prejudice analysis is to reweigh all of the
    aggravating and mitigating evidence to see if there is a reasonable probability the
    jury would have returned a different sentence. Mr. Evans’s case is the mirror
    image of the Strickland analysis often done by our Court and the Supreme Court,
    in which no prejudice is found because the petitioner’s postconviction mitigation
    evidence is cumulative of the mitigating evidence the jury already knew about. 4
    4
    See, e.g., Cullen v. Pinholster, __ U.S. __, __, 
    131 S. Ct. 1388
    , 1409 (2011) (finding no
    reasonable probability that the additional evidence presented in state habeas proceeding would
    have changed jury’s verdict because the “‘‘new’ evidence largely duplicated the mitigation
    evidence at trial”); Wong v. Belmontes, 
    558 U.S. 15
    , __, 
    130 S. Ct. 383
    , 387 (2009) (finding no
    prejudice in part where “[s]ome of the evidence was merely cumulative of the humanizing
    evidence . . . actually presented [at trial]; adding it to what was already there would have made
    little difference”); Holsey v. Warden, Ga. Diagnostic Prison, 
    694 F.3d 1230
    , 1271 (11th Cir.
    2012) (“The cumulative nature of [the mitigating] evidence weakens its usefulness to [the capital
    60
    Case: 10-14920       Date Filed: 01/04/2013       Page: 61 of 72
    Here, the postconviction aggravating evidence was mostly cumulative to the
    evidence presented at the penalty phase but the powerful mitigating evidence was
    not.
    Because the Florida Supreme Court’s prejudice determination rested, in part,
    on an unreasonable determination of the facts—that the mitigating evidence was
    more harmful than helpful because it would have resulted in the jury learning facts
    it was already generally aware of—its ruling on prejudice is not entitled to
    deference under AEDPA. We have explained:
    When a state court's adjudication of a habeas claim results in a
    decision that is based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in
    light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding, this
    Court is not bound to defer to unreasonably-found facts or to the legal
    conclusions that flow from them. When a state court unreasonably
    determines the facts relevant to a claim, we do not owe the state
    court’s findings deference under AEDPA, and we apply the pre–
    AEDPA de novo standard of review to the habeas claim.
    habeas petitioner] on the prejudice inquiry.”); Sochor v. Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr., 
    685 F.3d 1016
    ,
    1031(11th Cir. 2012) (finding no prejudice in part because “[m]ost of the nonstatutory mitigating
    evidence that [petitioner] produced in the evidentiary hearing was cumulative of evidence
    produced at the guilt and penalty phases of the trial”); Rose v. McNeil, 
    634 F.3d 1224
    , 1243
    (11th Cir. 2011) (“[A] petitioner cannot satisfy the prejudice prong of the Strickland test with
    evidence that is merely cumulative of evidence already presented at trial”); Boyd v. Allen, 
    592 F.3d 1274
    , 1298 (11th Cir. 2010) (holding no prejudice in part because “much (although not all)
    of the ‘new’ testimony introduced at the post-conviction hearing would simply have amplified
    the themes already raised at trial”); Robinson v. Moore, 
    300 F.3d 1320
    , 1347 (11th Cir. 2002)
    (holding no prejudice where “most of the new mitigation evidence [was] cumulative of the
    nonstatutory mitigating circumstances presented during resentencing”); 
    id. (“While the
    additional mitigation witnesses procured by Robinson's 3.850 counsel could have presented the
    resentencing jury and trial judge with more details, or different examples, of these aspects of
    Robinson's life, these aspects of his life were nonetheless known to the resentencing jury and
    trial judge.”); Glock v. Moore, 
    195 F.3d 625
    , 636 (11th Cir. 1999) (concluding that capital
    petitioner could not show prejudice because “much of the new evidence that [petitioner] presents
    is merely . . . cumulative to that which was presented at trial”).
    61
    Case: 10-14920        Date Filed: 01/04/2013        Page: 62 of 72
    Cooper v. Sec’y, Dep’t of Corr., 
    646 F.3d 1328
    , 1353 (11th Cir. 2011) (quotation
    marks and alteration omitted). Thus it is our obligation to determine de novo
    whether Mr. Evans was prejudiced by the failure of his counsel to present the
    mitigating evidence which has since come to light.5
    III.
    There is another reason why the Florida Supreme Court’s ruling on Mr.
    Evans’s penalty phase ineffective assistance of counsel claim is not entitled to
    deference under AEDPA. I believe that the Florida Supreme Court unreasonably
    applied Strickland’s prejudice standard. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). This is
    because that Court’s prejudice analysis suffers from the same infirmity the U.S.
    Supreme Court identified and repudiated in Porter v. McCollum, 
    130 S. Ct. 447
    .
    In Porter v. McCollum, the U. S. Supreme Court found the Florida Supreme
    Court’s analysis of a capital habeas petitioner’s penalty phase Strickland claim to
    be “an unreasonable application of our clearly established [federal] law.” 130 S.
    Ct. at 455. The U.S. Supreme Court reversed the ruling in Porter v. State, 
    788 So. 2d
    917, where the Florida Supreme Court affirmed the trial judge’s ruling in which
    he gave greater weight to the expert who testified for the State of Florida than the
    expert presented by Mr. Porter. Stating that the trial court had “resolved the
    5
    The state trial court’s conclusion that trial counsel made a strategic decision to present only
    good character evidence, despite counsel’s lack of investigation, is the same kind of “post hoc
    rationalization” rejected in Wiggins. 
    Wiggins, 539 U.S. at 526
    27, 123 S. Ct. at 2538
    .
    62
    Case: 10-14920       Date Filed: 01/04/2013        Page: 63 of 72
    conflict of the expert opinion” and “concluded that [Porter] failed to demonstrate
    the existence of the alleged mitigation,” the Florida Supreme Court affirmed the
    state trial court’s conclusion that there was no prejudice under Strickland. 
    Id. at 923–24
    (citing Stephens v. State, 
    748 So. 2d 1028
    , 1034 (Fla. 1998)).6
    In Porter v. McCollum, the United States Supreme Court rejected this
    analysis as an unreasonable application of Strickland:
    The Florida Supreme Court’s decision that Porter was not prejudiced
    by his counsel’s failure to conduct a thorough—or even cursory—
    investigation is unreasonable. The Florida Supreme Court either did
    not consider or unreasonably discounted the mitigation evidence
    adduced in the postconviction hearing. Under Florida law, mental
    health evidence that does not rise to the level of establishing a
    statutory mitigating circumstance may nonetheless be considered by
    the sentencing judge and jury as mitigating. See, e.g., Hoskins v.
    State, 
    965 So. 2d 1
    , 17–18 (Fla. 2007) (per curiam). Indeed, the
    Constitution requires that “the sentencer in capital cases must be
    permitted to consider any relevant mitigating factor.” Eddings v.
    Oklahoma, 
    455 U.S. 104
    , 112, 
    102 S. Ct. 869
    (1982). Yet neither the
    postconviction trial court nor the Florida Supreme Court gave any
    consideration for the purpose of nonstatutory mitigation to Dr. Dee’s
    testimony regarding the existence of a brain abnormality and
    6
    In Stephens v. State, 
    784 So. 2d 1028
    , the Florida Supreme Court resolved an inconsistency in
    its jurisprudence about the standard for reviewing Strickland claims in collateral proceedings.
    Stephens held that under Strickland, both the performance and prejudice prongs are mixed
    questions of law and fact, with deference on appeal given only to the lower court’s factual
    findings. 
    Id. at 1033.
    But Stephens made clear that even under this test, “[w]e recognize and
    honor the trial court’s superior vantage point in assessing the credibility of witnesses and in
    making findings of fact. The deference that appellate courts afford findings of fact based on
    competent, substantial evidence is an important principle of appellate review.” 
    Id. at 1034.
    In
    Porter v. State, the Florida Supreme Court relied on this very language from Stephens as
    requiring it to discount and discard the testimony of Mr. Porter’s mental health expert’s opinion
    which had been presented by Mr. Porter at his state court evidentiary hearing. See Porter v.
    State, 
    788 So. 2d
    at 923–24.
    63
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 64 of 72
    cognitive defects. While the State’s experts identified perceived
    problems with the tests that Dr. Dee used and the conclusions that he
    drew from them, it was not reasonable to discount entirely the effect
    that his testimony might have had on the jury or the sentencing judge.
    Porter v. 
    McCollum, 130 S. Ct. at 454
    –55 (footnote omitted).
    One way to characterize the problem in Mr. Evans’s case is to say that the
    Florida Supreme Court analyzed Evans’s Strickland claim the same way it did Mr.
    Porter’s. Compare Evans v. State, 
    946 So. 2d
    at 12, with Porter v. State, 
    788 So. 2d
    at 923. Immediately after the Florida Supreme Court correctly identified
    Strickland as the governing standard for reviewing ineffective assistance of
    counsel claims in Mr. Evans’s case, it stated:
    We defer to the trial court’s findings of fact regarding the credibility
    of witnesses and the weight assigned to the evidence but review the
    deficiency and prejudice prongs de novo. Windom v. State, 
    886 So. 2d
    915, 921 (Fla. 2004) (citing Stephens v. State, 
    784 So. 2d 1028
    ,
    1034 (Fla. 1999).
    Evans, 
    946 So. 2d
    at 10. That the Florida Supreme Court expressly relied on
    Stephens in Mr. Evans’s case signaled that it considered itself bound, based on its
    own precedent interpreting Strickland, to defer to the state postconviction trial
    court’s findings on the existence of mitigation, including its resolution of conflicts
    in the evidence between the experts.
    In Evans v. State, like in Porter v. State, the state habeas court discounted
    the opinions of Mr. Evans’s two mental health experts about the existence and
    significance of mental health mitigation in his case. The state trial court’s order
    64
    Case: 10-14920        Date Filed: 01/04/2013       Page: 65 of 72
    denying postconviction relief acknowledged that both of Mr. Evans’s experts
    agreed that, at the time of the offense, Evans met the criteria for Florida’s statutory
    mental state mitigators, 7 in part due to his brain damage. See also Evans v. State,
    
    946 So. 2d
    at 8. The state trial court also noted that the state’s expert reached the
    opposite conclusion: Evans did not satisfy Florida’s statutory mental health
    mitigators. See also 
    id. at 8–9.
    The state trial court then went on to resolve the
    conflict between the experts’ testimony as follows:
    The Court finds that [trial counsel] was not ineffective for failing to
    retain an expert witness to present evidence of brain damage suffered
    by Mr. Evans, in support of mitigation that Mr. Evans was under the
    influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance at the time of
    the offense. Based on the testimony of [the state’s expert], the Court
    finds that any brain damage suffered by [Mr. Evans] was minimal and
    did not support a conclusion he had an impulse control disorder. The
    Court also finds that defense counsel was not ineffective for failing to
    investigate and present evidence in support of statutory mitigation that
    Mr. Evans[’s] capacity to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or
    to conform his conduct to the requirements of law was substantially
    impaired at the time of the offense. The defense experts’ conclusions
    concerning [Mr. Evans’s] mental state were completely rebutted by
    the State’s expert.
    Doc. 17, Exh. G-3 at 29. Indeed, the state trial court’s order left little doubt that it
    completely discounted Mr. Evans’s evidence of brain damage:
    The Court finds more credence in the testimony of [the state’s expert]
    than in the testimony of the defense doctors presented. Although all
    7
    See Fla. Stat. §§ 921.141(6)(b) (“The capital felony was committed while the defendant was
    under the influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance.”), and (6)(f) (“The capacity of
    the defendant to appreciate the criminality of his or her conduct or to conform his or her conduct
    to the requirements of law was substantially impaired.”).
    65
    Case: 10-14920       Date Filed: 01/04/2013       Page: 66 of 72
    the doctors agree that he had some type of brain injury, the Court
    finds the defense has not established a sufficient ‘link’ between [Mr.
    Evans’s] behavior and his actions the night of the murder, such that it
    could be considered a mitigator.8
    
    Id. at 13
    (footnote added). These critical findings of fact about the non-existence
    of statutory and nonstatutory mitigation rendered the state court’s prejudice
    analysis unreasonable because, just the same as in Porter v. State, the state trial
    courts “either did not consider or unreasonably discounted the mitigation evidence
    adduced in the postconviction hearing.” Porter v. 
    McCollum, 130 S. Ct. at 454
    .
    We have been instructed that in order to make the prejudice determination
    required by Strickland, a reviewing court must “consider the totality of the
    available mitigation evidence—both that adduced at trial, and the evidence
    adduced in the habeas proceeding—and reweigh it against the evidence in
    aggravation.” 
    Id. at 453–54
    (quotation marks and alteration omitted). Where, as
    in Mr. Evans’s case, the state courts unreasonably discount a capital defendant’s
    mitigation, the state court fails to consider the “totality of the available mitigation
    evidence” as required by Strickland.
    8
    The state trial court’s requirement of a “nexus” between the mitigating evidence and the crime
    is also troubling because the U.S. Supreme Court has squarely rejected such a narrow definition
    of mitigation. See Tennard v. Dretke, 
    542 U.S. 274
    , 285–87, 
    124 S. Ct. 2562
    , 2570–72 (2004)
    (stating that “impaired intellectual functioning is inherently mitigating” and that defendant need
    not establish nexus between mental capacity and crime for evidence to be relevant to mitigation);
    see also Hodge v. Kentucky, __ U.S. __, __, No. 11-10974, 
    2012 WL 5989825
    , *1 (Dec. 3,
    2012) (Sotomayor, J., dissenting from denial of certiorari) (“Mitigation evidence need not, and
    rarely could, ‘explai[n]’ a heinous crime; rather, mitigation evidence allows a jury to make a
    reasoned moral decision whether the individual defendant deserves to be executed, or to be
    shown mercy instead.”).
    66
    Case: 10-14920       Date Filed: 01/04/2013      Page: 67 of 72
    In light of the majority’s opinion that nothing in Porter v. McCollum
    compels the conclusion I have reached in this case, there are a few points about my
    understanding of that case that bear emphasis. First, I do not read Porter v.
    McCollum’s “did not consider or unreasonably discounted” language to impose a
    requirement on state courts that they must mention or address all of the mitigation
    presented in order to properly conduct Strickland’s prejudice analysis. This much
    should be plain from the holding in Porter v. McCollum and even a cursory
    examination of the Florida Supreme Court’s opinion in Porter v. State, 
    788 So. 2d
    at 921–25. 9 It is well settled that state court adjudications are entitled to AEDPA
    deference even if they are unaccompanied by opinions. See Cullen v. Pinholster,
    ___ U.S. ___, ___, 
    131 S. Ct. 1388
    , 1402 (2011) (“Section 2254(d) applies even
    where there has been a summary denial.”).
    Second, I do not read Porter v. McCollum as authorizing federal courts to
    review state court opinions as if we were grading papers. In fact, speaking of the
    role of the federal courts in those terms overlooks our solemn obligation and duty
    under AEDPA to consider whether the state court’s adjudication of a prisoner’s
    habeas action is contrary to, or an unreasonable application of, clearly established
    9
    Said another way, the error recognized in Porter v. McCollum cannot be merely that the Florida
    Supreme Court failed to address or discuss the new mitigating evidence in its opinion. Even a
    cursory examination of the Florida Supreme Court’s opinion in Porter v. State reveals that that
    court explicitly addressed Porter’s new mitigating evidence by reviewing the evidence adduced
    at the state court evidentiary hearing at length. See 
    788 So. 2d
    at 921–25.
    67
    Case: 10-14920      Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 68 of 72
    Supreme Court precedent or an unreasonable determination of the facts. See 28
    U.S.C. §2254(d). Having said that, I fully recognize that Porter v. McCollum did
    nothing to undo, or recede from, the wide latitude and deference owed state court
    adjudications on the merits under AEDPA. But when evaluating a state habeas
    prisoner’s petition, “a habeas court must determine what arguments or theories
    supported or, if none were stated, could have supported the state court’s decision;
    and then it must ask whether it is possible that fairminded jurists could disagree
    that those arguments or theories are inconsistent with the holding in a prior
    decision of the Supreme Court.” Reese v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 
    675 F.3d 1277
    , 1286 (11th Cir. 2012) (quoting 
    Harrington, 131 S. Ct. at 786
    )) (alterations
    omitted). So where, as here in Mr. Evans’s case, the state court goes to the trouble
    of supporting its ruling with a written opinion, it is proper that federal courts
    carefully consider the analysis provided. Certainly, the same principles of comity
    and federalism that animate our deference to state courts, dictate that when we
    examine a state court’s stated reasons, we accept that the state court says what it
    means and means what it says in its opinions. That being the case, when the
    Florida Supreme Court said it was going to rely on Stephens to evaluate Mr.
    Evans’s Strickland claim, I accept that it did.
    Third, I do not read Porter v. McCollum as announcing a new rule of law or
    in any way modifying Strickland’s prejudice standard. At the same time, Porter v.
    68
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 69 of 72
    McCollum is more than just an application of Strickland to a single set of facts.
    Rather, Porter v. McCollum also teaches federal courts how to properly apply the
    “unreasonable application” prong of AEDPA. After all, we must be mindful that
    the United States Supreme Court not only held that the Florida Supreme Court
    unreasonably applied clearly established federal law, but it also reversed this
    Court’s judgment in Porter v. Attorney General, 
    552 F.3d 1260
    , 1274 (11th Cir.
    2008), that the Florida Supreme Court’s opinion in Porter v. State, 
    788 So. 2d
    917,
    was entitled to deference under AEDPA. See Porter v. 
    McCollum, 130 S. Ct. at 456
    .
    Finally, Porter v. McCollum makes clear that an evaluation of the mitigating
    evidence presented to establish prejudice under the prejudice prong of the
    Strickland standard must be evaluated from the perspective of the sentencing jury.
    The issue is not what impact the evidence of prejudice had on the judge presiding
    at a collateral evidentiary hearing, but what impact that evidence may have had on
    the jury who heard the case if it had been presented. See Porter v. 
    McCollum, 130 S. Ct. at 454
    –55.
    For each of these reasons, I have concluded the state court’s adjudication of
    Mr. Evan’s penalty phase ineffective assistance of counsel claim is not entitled to
    deference under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1) and (2).
    69
    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013    Page: 70 of 72
    IV.
    Under de novo review, I conclude that Mr. Evans has satisfied Strickland’s
    demanding standard for finding both that his counsel was deficient and that Mr.
    Evans was prejudiced by that deficiency. Based on the facts set out above, I have
    no doubt that his trial counsel’s investigation of Mr. Evans’s life history was
    constitutionally deficient. The result was that Mr. Evans’s jury never heard about
    his closedhead injury at age three, resulting brain damage, learning disabilities, and
    impulse control problems. I understand this to be precisely the kind of troubled
    history the U.S. Supreme Court has “declared relevant to assessing a defendant’s
    moral culpability.” Porter v. 
    McCollum, 130 S. Ct. at 454
    (citing 
    Wiggins, 539 U.S. at 513
    , 123 S. Ct. at 2531).
    When I reweigh all of the mitigating and aggravating evidence, both from
    the trial and the state postconviction proceeding, I conclude that “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.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 
    695, 104 S. Ct. at 2069
    . On the
    aggravating side of the ledger, the penalty phase jury heard a lot of evidence about
    why a death penalty should be imposed on Mr. Evans. Much of the new
    aggravating evidence introduced at the postconviction hearing was cumulative of
    70
    Case: 10-14920       Date Filed: 01/04/2013       Page: 71 of 72
    the evidence the jury had already heard, and would not have significantly altered
    the weight on the aggravating side of the scale.10
    On the mitigating side of the ledger, the sentencing jury was given little if
    any evidence to support a decision not to impose the death penalty. I am aware
    that the jury was presented with, and the trial court found, nonstatuory mitigating
    evidence that portrayed Mr. Evans’s in a positive light. See Evans v State, 
    838 So. 2d
    1090, 1097 (Fla. 2002). But Mr. Evans’s counsel gave the jury no basis for
    understanding how someone of purported “good character” could have gone so
    tragically off course as to shoot and kill Angel Johnson. This, when there was
    10
    For several reasons, I think the majority gives too much weight to the supposed negative
    impact it imagines Mr. Evans’s jury would have placed on expert opinion from the state
    postconviction hearing that Mr. Evans suffers from antisocial personality disorder (ASPD).
    First, under Florida law, ASPD is considered a “valid mitigating circumstance for trial courts to
    consider and weigh.” Morton v. State, 
    789 So. 2d 324
    , 329–30 (Fla. 2001); see also Morton v.
    Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 
    684 F.3d 1157
    , 1168 (11th Cir. 2012) (“[T]here cannot be a per se
    rule that a lawyer renders ineffective assistance by presenting evidence of antisocial personality
    disorder for purposes of mitigation.”). Second, to the extent an ASPD diagnosis in Mr. Evan’s
    case might have been aggravating, rather than mitigating, any adverse impact of this labeling
    would have been merely cumulative to the various incidents of violence and antisocial
    tendencies the jury already knew about. The jury did not need an expert to tell them that Mr.
    Evans had ASPD to evaluate his moral culpability based on the totality of the evidence known to
    them. Cf. 
    Belmontes, 130 S. Ct. at 388
    (rejecting notion that mitigating evidence would have
    carried “greater weight” if it had been submitted with expert testimony because, where the
    evidence was not complex, the jury “could use its common sense” to understand its significance).
    Further, assuming the jury had been told Mr. Evans suffers from ASPD, we must also consider
    that reasonably competent counsel could have mitigated the impact of such a diagnosis by
    focusing on those troubled aspects of Mr. Evans’s background which led to the development of
    the disorder. In any event, we know that a diagnosis of ASPD does not preclude a finding of
    Strickland prejudice where counsel otherwise fails to investigate and present powerful mental
    health mitigating evidence. For example, the Supreme Court granted penalty phase relief in
    Porter v. McCollum even though the state’s expert opined that Mr. Porter had met most of the
    diagnostic criteria for ASPD. See Porter v. Crosby, No. 6-03-cv-1465-Orl-31KRS, 
    2007 WL 1747316
    , *28 (M.D. Fla. June 18, 2007).
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    Case: 10-14920     Date Filed: 01/04/2013   Page: 72 of 72
    powerful and constitutionally relevant evidence that existed in the case. I
    understand the Supreme Court to have taught us that juries should know about this
    kind of information so that they can make individualized sentencing
    determinations. As they have said, “[a] process that accords no significance to
    relevant facets of the character and record of the individual offender or the
    circumstances of the particular offense excludes from consideration in fixing the
    ultimate punishment of death the possibility of compassionate or mitigating factors
    stemming from the diverse frailties of humankind.” Woodson v. North Carolina,
    
    428 U.S. 280
    , 304, 
    96 S. Ct. 2978
    , 2991 (1976).
    For me, it cannot be correct that Mr. Evans’s childhood head injury and the
    devastating effects it had on his life were entitled to no weight, simply because
    introduction of those facts would have also resulted in the jury hearing more bad
    facts about him. This is particularly true when those bad facts are so similar in
    kind to the negative evidence the jury had already heard. The explanation of why
    an individual committed a horrific crime and other bad acts which may aggravate
    the crime is what the Eighth Amendment jurisprudence labels as mitigating. I
    cannot ignore the reasonable probability that a jury would have returned with a
    different sentence had they learned about how Mr. Evans succumbed to the frailties
    inherent in his own life. I would therefore grant him habeas relief.
    72